MacDonald v. MacDonald

2018 UT 48, 430 P.3d 612
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 2018
DocketCase No. 20170789
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2018 UT 48 (MacDonald v. MacDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacDonald v. MacDonald, 2018 UT 48, 430 P.3d 612 (Utah 2018).

Opinion

Associate Chief Justice Lee, opinion of the Court:

¶ 1 Kirkpatrick MacDonald (MacDonald) filed a petition to vacate or reduce the alimony award to his former spouse Lee Anne MacDonald (now known as Lee Anne Fahey). The district court denied MacDonald's petition under Utah Code section 30-3-5(8)(i)(i).

In doing so it applied a standard set forth in a line of cases from our court of appeals, which allows a modification of an alimony order only if there is a substantial change in circumstances that was not "contemplated" in the original decree of divorce. See Bolliger v. Bolliger , 2000 UT App 47 , ¶ 11, 997 P.2d 903 . That decision was affirmed on appeal to our court of appeals, but under a different standard.

¶ 2 The court of appeals repudiated the contemplated in the decree standard set forth in Bolliger and other cases. It concluded that those cases had been overtaken by the text of Utah Code section 30-3-5(8)(i)(i), which allows for a modification only where there is "a substantial material change in circumstances not foreseeable at the time of the divorce." But it affirmed the district court on the ground that the change in circumstances alleged by MacDonald was foreseeable at the time of the divorce in this case.

¶ 3 MacDonald asks us to reverse the court of appeals on the grounds that (1) the contemplated in the decree standard should be read into the statute by virtue of the "prior construction" canon of interpretation, see Christensen v. Indus. Comm'n , 642 P.2d 755 , 756 (Utah 1982) (discussing the prior construction canon); and (2) the change in circumstance identified by MacDonald was neither contemplated in the divorce decree nor foreseeable at the time of the divorce. We affirm, while clarifying the standard that applies under Utah Code section 30-3-5(8)(i)(i).

¶ 4 We hold that there is no basis in the prior construction canon for the contemplated in the decree standard set forth in Bolliger and other cases. We base that conclusion on the absence of the core predicate for this canon-an authoritative construction by the courts of the operative language of the statute. Neither Bolliger nor any of the other cited cases ever attempted to interpret the text of the statute. They simply perpetuated a standard set forth in a prior line of cases (and established under a prior statutory regime). And without an authoritative construction of the statute there is no basis for the prior construction canon.

¶ 5 To this extent we affirm the standard embraced by the court of appeals. We hold that the plain language of the statute applies-and that the question is whether an alleged substantial change was "foreseeable" at the time of the divorce, not whether it was "contemplated" in the divorce decree. But we also raise a point of clarification that is not addressed explicitly in the decision of the court of appeals. We clarify that the inquiry of foreseeability is limited to the universe of information that was presented in the record at the time the district court entered the divorce decree.

¶ 6 We also affirm the court of appeals' application of the legal standard to the facts of this case under this clarified standard. We hold that MacDonald failed to carry his burden of establishing, on the basis of the record that was before the court that entered the divorce decree, that the change that he alleges was not foreseeable.

I

¶ 7 MacDonald filed for divorce from Fahey in February 2010. MacDonald and Fahey entered into a mediated settlement agreement, which was fully incorporated into a divorce decree. That agreement required MacDonald to pay alimony to Fahey through December 2020 (or earlier if she remarried, cohabited, or died). Per the agreement, alimony payments increased from $2,000 per month to $6,000 per month after December 2012-the last month that MacDonald owed a monthly $4,000 property settlement payment to Fahey.

¶ 8 The agreement also divided the marital real property. Fahey acquired ownership to three unencumbered lots. MacDonald agreed to pay the homeowner's association fees and property taxes on those lots as a loan, for five years or until Fahey sold one of the lots, at which time Fahey would reimburse MacDonald.

¶ 9 After the settlement agreement was signed and the divorce decree was entered one of Fahey's lots sold for $1,425,000. MacDonald "was directly involved in and responsible for the sale." Both MacDonald and Fahey agreed to that sale prior to entry of the divorce decree. And the sale closed shortly after the decree was entered. Fahey placed most of the proceeds from the property sale into an investment account that she previously opened with the $200,000 financial settlement MacDonald paid Fahey before mediation. That investment account now produces about $45,000 in annual income for Fahey.

¶ 10 In light of the property sale and Fahey's new income, MacDonald filed a petition to vacate or reduce the alimony award under Utah Code section 30-3-5(8)(i). The district court denied MacDonald's petition. In so doing it applied a test from a line of cases handed down by the Utah Court of Appeals, citing Wall v. Wall , 2007 UT App 61 , 157 P.3d 341 ; Moon v. Moon , 1999 UT App 12 , 973 P.2d 431 ; and Moore v. Moore , 872 P.2d 1054 (Utah Ct. App. 1994). That test grants the district court continuing jurisdiction to modify a divorce decree when a substantial change of circumstances is "not contemplated" by the decree itself. The court concluded that the divorce decree "expressly contemplate[d] that [Fahey] would sell the lots and use the proceeds of the sales of those lots to pay her expenses[,]" therefore precluding the court from modifying the alimony award.

¶ 11 MacDonald appealed the denial of the petition. The court of appeals affirmed. But it based its decision on a different standard than that applied by the district court. It interpreted Utah Code section 30-3-5(8)(i)(i) to warrant a modification of alimony only when "a substantial material change in circumstances [was] not foreseeable." Macdonald v. Macdonald , 2017 UT App 136

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 UT 48, 430 P.3d 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-macdonald-utah-2018.