Lynch v. Cheney

561 P.2d 380, 98 Idaho 238, 1977 Ida. LEXIS 355
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1977
Docket11910
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 561 P.2d 380 (Lynch v. Cheney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynch v. Cheney, 561 P.2d 380, 98 Idaho 238, 1977 Ida. LEXIS 355 (Idaho 1977).

Opinion

BAKES, Justice.

Plaintiff respondent Norma B. Cheney Lynch brought this action in April, 1974, in Cassia County to establish as a foreign judgment in this state the amount of arrearages due under a modified California child support order. The district court ruled that the father, defendant appellant Ross Cheney, had not sustained the burden of proving his defense that Norma Cheney Lynch had orally agreed to cancel the arrearages and awarded her $5,350.00 in unpaid support, plus $1,382.64 interest. We affirm.

Lynch and Cheney were married in 1952, and were divorced in California in 1969. Incorporated into the divorce decree was a marital property and support settlement agreement entered into by the parties which provided that the father, Ross Cheney, would pay to the mother, Norma Cheney, $125.00 per month for each of their two children beginning March 1, 1969. Ross Cheney subsequently left the state of California and presently resides in Idaho. On December 1, 1970, an order was entered by the district court of Canyon County ordering Ross Cheney to thereafter pay the amount of $50.00 per month per child. This order, which was apparently a Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Order made pursuant to I.C. §§ 7-1048 et seq., made no *240 mention of the California decree or the collection of any arrearages under it. At that time Ross Cheney was already at least $3,000.00 in arrears under the original California decree. The December 1, 1970, order of the district court in Canyon County dealt only prospectively with Ross Cheney’s support obligation, which it set at $50.00 per child per month.

At the time of the divorce in 1969, Norma was given custody of the children, Craig, born in 1954, and Carla, born in 1961, and they remained with her throughout 1969, 1970 and the first half of 1971. In the summer of 1971, both children spent about 2V2 months with their father. In early 1972, Norma was having problems in her second marriage and she called Ross and asked him to take Carla, who was then 11, for an indefinite period. Carla spent approximately nine months with her father, who was then living in Baker, Oregon. She returned to her mother in late 1972 and has remained with her since. Also in 1972, the parties agreed that Craig, who was then 18, would go to Oregon and attend college in nearby LaGrande, with his father’s support. Craig spent about seven months in 1972 with or near his father, and his college was financed by Ross Cheney. Craig remained in Oregon in 1973, attending school with his father’s financial assistance for a period of 9x/2 months. He spent vacations and the summer with his mother in California. Craig ceased his educational efforts in early 1974 and returned to California in May of that year. After IV2 months of unemployment, he obtained permanent employment although he continued to receive room and board from his mother.

At trial, Ross contended that he and Norma had orally agreed to a settlement of his past due support obligation at the time that he agreed to assume the financial burden of Craig’s education and to take Carla for a year. This agreement, he claimed, was reached by a telephone conversation in March or April of 1972. Ross testified that Norma agreed that if he would provide for Craig’s education, and take Carla, she would forgive all past due child support. Norma Cheney Lynch emphatically denied the existence of such an agreement, stating that she never agreed to cancel the accrued unpaid support. Although Norma admittedly made little effort to collect child support from Ross between 1972 and the institution of this suit in 1974, she explained her behavior by stating that she was experiencing financial difficulties during that period and was unable to afford an attorney. In addition, Craig Cheney testified that, as he traveled back and forth between Oregon and California during those two years, he often acted as messenger between his parents. He stated that he had prevailed upon his mother not to press his father for the support payments since “for the first time in my life” he was receiving his father’s aid and if his father terminated the financial assistance, he could not get through college. During 1972 and 1973, Ross sent no support payments to Norma. He began sending $50.00 a month for Carla’s support after this suit was instituted in 1974.

In a memorandum decision which also served as findings of fact and conclusions of law under I.R.C.P. 52(a), the trial court concluded that there was not “clear and satisfactory” evidence that an agreement to forgive all past due support payments existed. The court stated:

“In 1972 — March or April or thereabouts — by telephone conversation the parties arranged for Carla to go with her father for an indefinite time, and for Craig also to go with his father in furtherance of his higher education. The parties agreed that while Carla was with her father he would assume her direct support, and while Craig was with him he would assume his higher education and support. The evidence is not clear and satisfactory, as defendant claims, that a part of the consideration for this agreement was that all past due support payments due the plaintiff would be forgiven, although the evidence tends to show that after the children went with the defendant the plaintiff virtually ceased all efforts to collect back support until April, 1974 when she filed this action. However, the evidence also indicates the *241 reason to be lack of funds to hire a lawyer and the efforts of Craig to hold off his mother so as not to jeopardize his source of funds for higher education. The evidence of withholding collection action is consistent with a forgiveness of back support, but it is also consistent with the reasons just given. Therefore, as to this part of the alleged agreement, the evidence is not clear and satisfactory.” Clk.Tr., p. 32.

In its accounting of accrued unpaid child support, the court did not assess Ross Cheney for support each month that either or both the children were with him (Craig was considered with his father while he attended schools in Oregon). It concluded that Craig had become permanently self supporting after he returned to California and did not assess Ross for any support for Craig after June, 1974. The court awarded Norma Cheney Lynch $5,350.00 in unpaid support plus $1,382.64 in interest.

Appellant Ross Cheney asserts two basic contentions in support of his primary claim that the trial court should have reduced, if not completely forgiven, his past due support obligations: (1) that the parties by oral contract agreed that if Ross took Carla for one year and assumed responsibility for Craig’s support and college education, Norma would forgive all past due support; and (2) that the trial court in exercising its broad equity powers could have employed the equitable doctrines of ¡aches, estoppel and setoff, and itself reduced the support arrearages.

In his initial assignments of error, Ross Cheney contends that the trial court should have granted his motion, submitted after the memorandum decision was filed, to amend the pleadings to conform with the proof. In his answer to the complaint, Ross Cheney entered a general denial of his liability, raising no affirmative defenses. In his motion to amend under Rule 15(b), 1 he raised the defenses of the alleged agreement, laches, estoppel, and offset. The motion was denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
561 P.2d 380, 98 Idaho 238, 1977 Ida. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-cheney-idaho-1977.