Marquita Marie Samuel v. David Ernest Samuel

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 2024
Docket369041
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marquita Marie Samuel v. David Ernest Samuel (Marquita Marie Samuel v. David Ernest Samuel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marquita Marie Samuel v. David Ernest Samuel, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MARQUITA MARIE SAMUEL, UNPUBLISHED December 20, 2024 Plaintiff-Appellant, 9:14 AM

v No. 369041 Oakland Circuit Court DAVID ERNEST SAMUEL, LC No. 2022-516186-DM

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: N. P. HOOD, P.J., and CAMERON and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this divorce action, plaintiff, Marquita Marie Samuel (Marquita), appeals by right the consent judgment of divorce (JOD) and incorporated uniform child support order (UCSO), which provided a child support award that deviated from the Michigan Child Support Formula (MCSF) and required defendant, David Ernest Samuel (David), to pay $510 in monthly child support, a figure substantially lower than the $1,735 in monthly child support calculated under the MCSF. On appeal, Marquita argues that the trial court erroneously failed to adhere to the Support and Parenting Time Enforcement Act, MCL 552.601 et seq., in deviating from the MCSF. We disagree. The trial court complied with the applicable procedural requirements before deviating from the MCSF. We therefore affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In May 2014, the parties married. They share two minor children, both of whom were born during their marriage.1 In October 2022, Marquita filed for divorce. She sought sole custody of the parties’ children and a child support award in her favor per the MCSF. In December 2022, the parties participated in court-ordered mediation. They reached an ostensible settlement agreement

1 David also has two other children from his previous marriage.

-1- as reflected in a transcribed audio recording from the date of mediation.2 According to the mediator, Robert Badgley, the parties agreed to share joint custody of their children. Although the parties acknowledged that Marquita would exercise more overnights than David, they agreed to deviate from the MCSF and credit David for additional overnights to account for his after-school parenting time, which alleviated the need for child care. The parties agreed to calculate child support as if they each exercised nearly equal parenting time. Badgley did not specify the extent to which the parties agreed to deviate from the MCSF but explained that he would notify the parties of his child support calculation at a later date and that the agreed-upon deviation was subject to approval by the trial court. The parties stated that they understood and assented to the settlement agreement as expressed by Badgley.

After mediation took place, Badgley notified the parties that he calculated David’s child support obligation as totaling $1,170 per month. Badgley explained that he calculated the child support award based in part on the parties’ respective incomes—David earned $137,500 annually, and Marquita earned $47,000 annually. Badgley stated that he applied a second-family adjustment to account for David’s children from a previous marriage and calculated the child support award as if David and Marquita exercised nearly equal parenting time. Marquita disputed the proposed child support award as insufficient. In the months that followed, the parties could not reach a consensus regarding the appropriate child support award.

In May 2023, the parties filed competing motions for entry of a JOD and UCSO. David argued that the parties were bound by the terms of their mediated settlement agreement and contended that the trial court must accept Badgley’s child support calculation. Marquita, in contrast, maintained that Badgley’s child support calculation was flawed and argued that the trial court should accept her proposed child support calculation. Marquita’s proposed child support calculation did not credit David for support he provided to his children from a previous marriage because, according to her, there was no court order requiring David to support the children. It also accounted for a child care supplement in Marquita’s favor. It was further based on the parties’ agreement to calculate child support as if David and Marquita exercised nearly equal parenting time. Marquita calculated David’s child support obligation as totaling $1,489 per month.

In July 2023, the trial court held a hearing regarding the parties’ competing motions for entry of a JOD and UCSO. During the hearing, Marquita stated that she was willing to accept a child support award that credited David for support he provided only to one child from his previous marriage because his other child had recently turned 18 and graduated high school. Marquita also acknowledged that the child support award need not account for a childcare supplement in her favor because the parties’ youngest child no longer attended daycare. In light of Marquita’s concessions, the trial court stated that its child support award would credit David for the support

2 The transcribed audio recording was not admitted as evidence during the trial court proceedings. However, the trial court permitted Marquita’s counsel to read portions of the transcript on the record over the objection of David’s counsel during the August 2023 hearing regarding Marquita’s motion to set aside the parties’ mediated child support agreement. To the extent that the trial court relied on the transcribed audio recording in fashioning its child support award, the parties do not challenge that aspect of its reasoning on appeal.

-2- he provided to one child from his previous marriage and would not account for a childcare supplement in Marquita’s favor. But the trial court did not calculate the corresponding child support award on the record. It instead instructed Marquita’s counsel to present proofs regarding grounds for divorce. Marquita testified that the parties reached a mediated settlement agreement regarding their marital property distribution, child custody, parenting time, and child support. Marquita attested that she agreed to be bound by the terms of the parties’ mediated settlement agreement, which she believed to be in the best interests of the parties’ children. The trial court found that the parties’ proofs justified entry of a JOD and UCSO. It then instructed Marquita’s counsel to submit a proposed JOD and UCSO for entry.

Two weeks later, Marquita moved to set aside the parties’ mediated child support agreement. She argued for the first time that the parties’ mutual mistake justified setting aside their agreement to deviate from the MCSF. She averred that, in agreeing to deviate from the MCSF, the parties mistakenly relied on Badgley’s child support calculation, which was based on the erroneous premise that she agreed to cover the cost of childcare. Marquita alternatively argued that, even if the mistake was unilateral, it warranted setting aside the parties’ mediated child support agreement because it deprived the parties’ children of adequate support. In response, David argued that there was no mutual mistake because the parties agreed that child support would be calculated based on the parties’ respective incomes and as if they exercised nearly equal parenting time. David maintained that, in reaching his child support calculation, Badgley did not attribute childcare costs to either party. He concluded that the parties’ mediated child support agreement was binding because the parties knew that the child support award would deviate from the MCSF.

In August 2023, the trial court held a hearing regarding Marquita’s motion to set aside the parties’ mediated child support agreement. During the hearing, David’s counsel conceded that Badgley based his child support calculation on the erroneous premise that Marquita agreed to cover the cost of childcare.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Marquita Marie Samuel v. David Ernest Samuel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquita-marie-samuel-v-david-ernest-samuel-michctapp-2024.