Marilyn Williams Hedlesky v. Steven Hedlesky

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 3, 2015
DocketCA-0015-0117
StatusUnknown

This text of Marilyn Williams Hedlesky v. Steven Hedlesky (Marilyn Williams Hedlesky v. Steven Hedlesky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marilyn Williams Hedlesky v. Steven Hedlesky, (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

15-117

MARILYN WILLIAMS HEDLESKY

VERSUS

STEVEN HEDLESKY ************

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 2009-4392, DIVISION “C” HONORABLE GUY E. BRADBERRY, DISTRICT JUDGE

************

JAMES T. GENOVESE JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Marc T. Amy, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Oliver “Jackson” Schrumpf Law Office of Oliver “Jackson” Schrumpf and Charles Schrumpf, (A PLC) 3801 Maplewood Drive Sulphur, Louisiana 70663 (337) 625-9077 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Marilyn Williams Hedlesky B. Thomas Shea Walter M. Sanchez The Sanchez Law Firm, L.L.C. 901 Lakeshore Drive, Suite 1050 Lake Charles, Louisiana 70601 (337) 433-4405 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Steven Hedlesky GENOVESE, Judge.

In this domestic proceeding, Plaintiff, Marilyn Williams Hedlesky (Ms.

Williams), appeals the trial court’s judgment dismissing her Rule for Contempt

against her former spouse, Defendant, Steven Hedlesky (Dr. Hedlesky) for non-

payment of child support. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand for

further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Ms. Williams and Dr. Hedlesky were married on January 15, 1998.

Subsequent to their marriage, Dr. Hedlesky adopted two of Ms. Williams’s

children from a prior marriage, neither of which are the subject of this contempt

proceeding. Thereafter, only one child was born of their marriage, Emily

Hedlesky, who is presently sixteen years of age. Ms. Williams and Dr. Hedlesky

divorced, and Dr. Hedlesky’s child support obligation for Emily was fixed at

$3,761.00 per month, beginning September 25, 2010. This child support

obligation was the subject of an Income Assignment Order of February 13, 2014.

After litigation over the division of their community property, a partition

judgment was rendered on December 3, 2013. A by-product of that community

property judgment was judgment in favor of Dr. Hedlesky against Ms. Williams

for $263,485.10.

The facts in this case are not in dispute. Beginning March 27, 2014, Dr.

Hedlesky began reducing his child support payments on the grounds that he was

entitled to offset his child support obligation to Emily with the amount owed to

him by Ms. Williams pursuant to the partition judgment. Dr. Hedlesky paid

$1,000.00 in child support for March and April 2014. For May 2014, Dr. Hedlesky

paid the full child support obligation of $3,761.00, due to Ms. Williams’s then pending bankruptcy proceedings. Dr. Hedlesky made no further child support

payments thereafter. On July 15, 2014, Ms. Williams filed a Rule for Contempt

due to Dr. Hedlesky’s failure to pay child support for Emily.

Ms. Williams’s Rule for Contempt was considered by the hearing officer on

September 16, 2014. For reasons provided on September 29, 2014, the hearing

officer denied Ms. Williams’s Rule for Contempt. Ms. Williams’s appealed the

hearing officer’s decision. Following a hearing on October 30, 2014, the trial court

made the recommendation of the hearing officer the judgment of the court on

November 5, 2014. From said judgment, Ms. Williams appeals.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Ms. Williams presents the following assignments of error for our review:

1. The trial court erred in failing to hold Dr. Hedlesky in contempt, thereby condoning “self-help” to terminate or offset child support obligations.

2. The trial court over[-]extended and misinterpreted the 1950 case of [Saunier v. Saunier, 47 So.2d 19 (La.1950)], because [Saunier] allowed only a partial offset of the portion of the support (combined spousal and child support) to be taken or offset by the obligor spouse; [Saunier] did not authorize the taking of 100% of the child support to offset a community property claim.

3. The trial court erred in failing to apply affirmative, remedial legislation that strictly prohibits “self-help” and strongly opposes taking child support to pay debts of one spouse to another, without holding a hearing to determine whether or how much of an offset can be applied.

4. The result is inequitable, taking the child support from a [fifteen- year-old] (now [sixteen-year-old]) child to pay a claim allegedly owed to a spouse earning $600,000[.00] per year in order to partially offset a community property claim.

5. The trial court failed to consider and apply recent legislation that would change the result in [Saunier].

2 LAW AND DISCUSSION

Although broken down into five individual assignments of error, Ms.

Williams summarizes her argument to this court as follows:

Self-help is not authorized in stopping child support payments. Even the cases cited by defendant, though ancient and preceding modern child support statutes, did not authorize a 100% offset of child support to enforce a community property claim the obligor spouse has against his former spouse for a community property equalization payment. Modern statutes put a priority on protecting child support. The lower court has abused its discretion in permitting the self-help of Dr. Hedlesky stopping 100% of the child support and in failing to punish his contemptuous act of stopping child support without first involving a judicial proceeding.

We agree with Ms. Williams.

The hearing officer reached what he termed “[t]his unsavory result” by

concluding that the decision of our supreme court in Saunier v. Saunier, 47 So.2d

19 (La.1950), was controlling and in Dr. Hedlesky’s favor. We have considered

Saunier and find it to be distinguishable from the instant case. Further, there have

been subsequent statutory and jurisprudential developments since 1950 that lead us

to a different conclusion.

In Saunier, a husband was ordered to pay a total of $200.00 per month in

alimony and child support. He later reduced his payment to $150.00 contending

that the debt of his wife, arising from their community property agreement,

allowed compensation to occur such that the amounts could be offset. The wife

filed a rule for contempt. The supreme court considered whether the wife’s debt

could “be pleaded in compensation of the judgment which condemned him to pay

alimony.” Id. at 22. The court noted that the underlying judgment failed to

allocate “how much of the amount of $200[.00] a month is allotted to the support

of the two minor children, and how much to the wife[,]” but did not find that to

3 “make any difference for the judgment is one in her favor[,] and the money is to be

spent in [sic] her for the support of both herself and the children.” Id. After

finding the debts to be “liquidated and demandable[,]”1 the supreme court next

considered whether the minor children were “third persons” in order to preclude

compensation by the husband due to resultant prejudice to the children.2 On this

issue, the court stated:

[I]t is contended that compensation cannot take place because it would lead to the prejudice of the two minor children in whose favor, as well as plaintiff’s, the judgment of alimony was rendered, and article 2215 of the Civil Code specifically provides that compensation cannot take place to the prejudice of the rights acquired by a third person.

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Marilyn Williams Hedlesky v. Steven Hedlesky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marilyn-williams-hedlesky-v-steven-hedlesky-lactapp-2015.