Marriage of Moberg v. Moberg

347 N.W.2d 791, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1318
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 20, 1984
DocketC4-83-825
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 347 N.W.2d 791 (Marriage of Moberg v. Moberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Moberg v. Moberg, 347 N.W.2d 791, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1318 (Mich. 1984).

Opinion

YETKA, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of the Hennepin County Family Court, vacating an order of a family court referee and the judgment entered thereon.

Appellant Ann Moberg and respondent Allen Moberg were divorced in 1978. The decree awarded appellant monthly support payments of $200 for each of the parties’ two minor children. There was no award of maintenance, but the question was reserved for a future time upon a showing of a material change in the parties’ financial position. In 1980 and 1981, appellant brought various motions for modification of the 1978 decree seeking, among other things, an increase in child support to $1,000 per month for each child and establishment of maintenance at $1,700 per month.

On May 15, 1981, a family court referee granted the requested relief. Respondent took no appeal from this order or the subsequent judgment, and he failed to comply with its provisions.

One year later, appellant moved to enforce the order. Respondent brought a cross-motion for a reduction in the support and maintenance amounts and for forgiveness of certain arrearages. On April 15, 1983, the Hennepin County Family Court denied the enforcement motion and vacated the referee’s order, declaring it void in its entirety and from its inception. Ann Mo-berg appeals. We reverse the family court and remand the case with instructions to reinstate the referee’s order.

We do not intend to recite the entire set of facts underlying this appeal, but some facts are necessary to understand the is'sues raised.

The district court file in this case is voluminous and complex, covering a multitude of post-dissolution matters. Most of the motions and orders in the file concern efforts' by appellant to enforce or modify the terms of the dissolution decree against respondent, a plastic surgeon. Respondent has been very resistant to legal action. He has often delayed action or response until a contempt motion is made or order issued. He has spent time in jail for contempt and has had three different sets of attorneys in this matter. He is significantly in arrears in support payments and, up until April of 1983, did not pay support regularly despite judgments against him for arrearages.

The parties have incurred thousands of dollars in legal fees for post-dissolution litigation. There are currently two appeals pending on post-dissolution matters. One is this case; the other is respondent’s appeal of a judgment against him for appellant’s attorney fees and for court-appointed receiver’s fees.

Respondent's conduct has been uncooperative and evasive throughout the post-dissolution matters. It is difficult to determine his income and earning potential, both because he resists compliance with discovery and because his answers can be confusing and equivocal. The record indicates that he owns or has owned several corporations dealing in medical services and aircraft. In one deposition, respondent indicated that he had earned $26,000 over a *793 3-month period in 1979 from a medical corporation in which he had a 50% interest. He stated that he actually received $5,000 of this as salary. Appellant earns approximately $1,000 per month as a secretary and has custody of the parties’ two teen-age children.

Appellant filed the motion for modification of support and maintenance on January 8, 1980, and she served the motion on respondent the following day. The motion was scheduled for hearing 1 week later before a family court referee. This hearing was never held because respondent successfully moved to refer the proceedings to the district court judge who granted the original decree. Appellant then filed other motions on various property matters.

All of appellant’s outstanding motions came on for hearing in January of 1981. In February, the judge issued his order ruling on property and arrearages issues and referring the motions for an increase in child support and establishment of maintenance to the Family Court Division.

A March 23, 1981, hearing date was set before a family court referee. Respondent failed to attend because his counsel had not given him notice of the hearing. It was rescheduled to April 29, 1981, before a different referee. Respondent’s counsel notified his client of this hearing date by letter dated on or about April 9, 1981. On or about April 27, 1981, respondent was personally served with an order to show cause, accompanying certain contempt motions scheduled for hearing on April 29.

Appellant personally appeared at the April 29 hearing and was represented by counsel; respondent failed to appear personally, but did appear through his counsel. The matters before the referee included a motion to recover child support arrearages; a motion to require respondent to maintain life insurance and pay attorney fees; the January 1980 motion to increase child support and to establish maintenance; two contempt motions; and a motion to require respondent to pay the parties’ debt to Northwestern National Bank of Minneapolis.

The referee found proper service of all motions before him, even though service of the order to show cause on the contempt motions was not made until 2 days before the hearing. During the hearing, appellant’s counsel withdrew the contempt motions and the referee did not rule on them.

The referee’s order found respondent in arrears in child support for the 3 months since the district court order. The referee also found that respondent had failed to maintain insurance coverage as required by the original decree, that he had failed to pay attorney fees as required by the March 23, 1981 order, that appellant’s earnings had decreased since the original judgment and decree, that respondent had the capacity to earn $8,800 per month as a physician and surgeon, and that appellant lacked sufficient property to provide for her reasonable needs and was unable to support herself adequately in employment which she is qualified to perform. The referee’s order stated that these findings were based on the evidence and arguments presented at the hearing and on the files and records before the court. The file included appellant’s affidavits regarding her monthly expenses and respondent’s 1979 deposition, and interrogatory answers in which he indicated that he had earned approximately $26,000 over-a 3-month period.

The referee granted appellant’s requested increase in child support and establishment of maintenance and ruled in appellant’s favor on all other motions as well.

At the close of the hearing, the referee instructed appellant’s counsel to prepare a draft order for submission to and review by respondent’s counsel. After receiving the draft order, respondent’s counsel made his objections by letter. He objected to the amount of attorney fees, the proposed award of child support until age 22, and the proposed award of indefinite maintenance. There was no objection to the amount of maintenance, the increase in child support, or the amount of that increase. The last line of the letter stated: “Other than that I have no objection and await the Court’s Order.”

*794 Respondent did not move to have the referee’s recommended findings .reviewed within the applicable 10-day period pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 484.65, subd. 9 (1982). He did not appeal the referee’s order or the subsequent judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
347 N.W.2d 791, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-moberg-v-moberg-minn-1984.