Malone v. Hutchinson-Malone

784 S.E.2d 206, 246 N.C. App. 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedApril 5, 2016
Docket14-1400
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 784 S.E.2d 206 (Malone v. Hutchinson-Malone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malone v. Hutchinson-Malone, 784 S.E.2d 206, 246 N.C. App. 544 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STROUD, Judge.

*544 Defendant appeals from an order terminating plaintiff's child support obligations and denying her motion for contempt and attorney's fees. Because the trial court terminated plaintiff's child support obligation based solely upon the terms of the parties' incorporated agreement, which was less generous than North Carolina General Statute § 50-13.4 as to the terminating events for the child support obligation, we must *545 reverse and remand to the trial court for entry of a new order based upon North Carolina General Statute § 50-13.4.

I. Background

The parties were married on 6 June 1993, separated on or about 15 November 1999, and divorced on 22 December 2006. One child, Doug, 1 was born to the parties during the course of their marriage on 15 July 1994. On 22 March 2013, plaintiff filed a motion seeking to terminate his obligation to pay child support, which was established by the parties' separation agreement as incorporated into their divorce judgment. The separation agreement acknowledged "that [Doug] has been diagnosed as having an autism spectrum disorder and is thus a child with special needs who requires particular care." The separation agreement then provided for specific child support payments

until such time as ... [Doug] becomes emancipated under North Carolina law or turns age eighteen, unless he is still a full-time secondary school student in which case it will continue until he is no longer a full-time secondary school student or turns age twenty, whichever first occurs.

In plaintiff's motion to terminate child support, plaintiff alleged that Doug was no longer in a home school program or in a secondary school, that Doug turned eighteen in July 2012, and that "the only way for [Doug] to obtain a North Carolina Diploma is there [sic] enrollment in a GED or Community College High School Program."

On 14 May 2013, defendant responded to plaintiff's motion to terminate child support alleging that, contrary to plaintiff's allegations, Doug was "still making progress towards *208 a NC high school diploma, not a GED, and [wa]s expected to finish the requirements for his diploma by the summer of 2013." On 14 May 2013, defendant filed a motion for contempt and attorney's fees, in which she alleged that plaintiff failed to pay his child support obligations from February 2013 and that such failure was "willful[] and without legal justification or excuse."

On 26 June 2014, the trial court entered an order in which it made numerous findings of fact and concluded that Doug "did not attend school full time after December 2012." Based upon its findings and conclusions, the trial court granted plaintiff's motion to terminate his child support obligation and denied defendant's motion for contempt and attorney's fees. Defendant appeals.

*546 II. Motion to Terminate

Defendant first contends that "the trial court erred in granting the plaintiff's motion to terminate[.]" (Original in all caps.)

[W]hen the trial court sits without a jury, the standard of review on appeal is whether there was competent evidence to support the trial court's findings of fact and whether its conclusions of law were proper in light of such facts. While findings of fact by the trial court in a non-jury case are conclusive on appeal if there is evidence to support those findings, conclusions of law are reviewable de novo.

Romulus v. Romulus, 215 N.C.App. 495 , 498, 715 S.E.2d 308 , 311 (2011) (citations and quotation marks omitted).

We must first seek to determine the effective date of the termination of child support according the trial court's order. The order states simply "[t]hat the motion to terminate child support is granted" but fails to include the date of termination. Defendant's own brief concedes that plaintiff paid child support until late February of 2013, and plaintiff's motion requested termination effective 1 March 2013, but it is not clear from the order when exactly plaintiff stopped making child support payments and for what, if any, remaining months defendant contended plaintiff should be required to further pay child support. 2 The order does find that Doug "did not attend school full time after December 2012[,]" but also includes a finding that he "returned to being homeschooled by defendant on January 21st 2013 and received a high school diploma" on 30 August 2013. Reading the order in its entirety and in conjunction with the other evidence, it appears that the trial court determined support should terminate as of January of 2013, although again, even defendant contends plaintiff made payments after this date, though perhaps the February 2013 payment was a late payment for a prior month. Overall, we are unable to discern when plaintiff stopped paying child support or the effective date of the trial court's order.

What the evidence does in fact show is a matter the trial court is to resolve, and its determination should be stated in appropriate and adequate findings of fact....
*547 Our decision to remand this case for further evidentiary findings is not the result of an obeisance to mere technicality. Effective appellate review of an order entered by a trial court sitting without a jury is largely dependent upon the specificity by which the order's rationale is articulated. Evidence must support findings; findings must support conclusions; conclusions must support the judgment. Each step of the progression must be taken by the trial judge, in logical sequence; each link in the chain of reasoning must appear in the order itself. Where there is a gap, it cannot be determined on appeal whether the trial court correctly exercised its function to find the facts and apply the law thereto.

Farmers Bank, Pilot Mountain v. Michael T. Brown Distributors, Inc., 307 N.C. 342 , 352-53, 298 S.E.2d 357 , 363 (1983). Therefore, we reverse and remand for further findings of fact on this issue. But in addition to this relatively minor detail, we would still have to reverse and remand due to a legal error in this case.

*209

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Bluebook (online)
784 S.E.2d 206, 246 N.C. App. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-hutchinson-malone-ncctapp-2016.