Marriage of Rhonda and Donald Damsc

2011 MT 297, 265 P.3d 1245, 363 Mont. 19
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 2011
DocketDA 10-0559
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2011 MT 297 (Marriage of Rhonda and Donald Damsc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Rhonda and Donald Damsc, 2011 MT 297, 265 P.3d 1245, 363 Mont. 19 (Mo. 2011).

Opinion

JUSTICE NELSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 Rhonda Damschen appeals various orders of the District Court for the Fourth Judicial District, Missoula County, reducing the amount of child support she is to receive, and ordering her to repay her ex-husband, Donald Damschen, the amount of child support he overpaid along with his attorney’s fees. We affirm and remand for a determination and assessment of costs and reasonable attorney’s fees incurred on appeal.

¶2 Rhonda raised three issues on appeal which we have consolidated into the following two issues:

¶3 1. Whether the District Court erred in granting Donald’s Motion to Modify Child Support.

¶4 2. Whether the District Court erred: (a) in awarding attorney’s fees to Donald; and (b) in the amount of attorney’s fees it awarded to Donald.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶5 Rhonda and Donald married in June 1989 in Missoula County. Both Rhonda and Donald are physicians. At the time the parties divorced in October 2000, Donald was employed as a general surgeon at Clark Fork Valley Hospital in Plains, while Rhonda remained at home to care for and home-school their three children, ages 6, 4 and 1 years old. Donald has since gone into private practice in Plains as a general surgeon, and Rhonda is currently employed part-time as a physician at the Montana State Hospital in Warm Springs.

¶6 The parties’ marriage was dissolved by a Decree of Dissolution of Marriage on October 18, 2000. The decree included a ‘Marital Dissolution Settlement Agreement and Parenting Plan” (the Agreement) dated August 31,2000. The Agreement provided that the parties would share the joint parenting of the children, but that Rhonda would be “the primary residential parent” and that Donald would have ‘frequent and liberal contact” with the children.

¶7 The Agreement provided the following regarding child support:

Donald agrees to pay child support to Rhonda as follows:

Twenty-six percent (26%) of his gross salary, including bonuses, *21 until [A] reaches the age of eighteen (18);

After [A] reaches the age of eighteen (18), [Donald] will pay twenty percent (20%) of his gross salary, including bonuses until [B] reaches the age of eighteen (18);

After [B] reaches the age of eighteen (18), [Donald] will pay fourteen percent (14%) of his gross salary, including bonuses, until [C] reaches the age of eighteen (18).

The parties also stipulated in the Agreement that they recognized that it was “outside the guidelines of the Uniform Child Support Guidelines.” Based on the Agreement, Donald’s child support obligation in 2000 when the parties divorced was $3,358 per month. Later, when Donald went into private practice, he received a lower salary and his monthly obligation was reduced to $2,600 per month. ¶8 The parties entered into a permanent settlement agreement on August 14, 2003, amending the original Agreement and changing residential custody of the children from Rhonda having primary residential custody to both parents sharing residential custody. The Agreement was further amended by the District Court in January 2005, to provide for enrolling the children in public school, and for alternating custody between Rhonda and Donald on a weekly basis.

¶9 On September 28, 2007, Donald filed a Motion to Modify Child Support pursuant to §40-4-208(2)(b)(i), MCA, alleging that there had been a substantial and continuing change of circumstances so as to make the existing terms unconscionable. Donald noted in his motion that when the parties entered into the Agreement, the children resided primarily with Rhonda and Rhonda was responsible for the majority of their expenses, including their home-schooling expenses. Now, however, the children are enrolled in public school and reside half of the time with Donald and half of the time with Rhonda. In addition, Donald stated that he pays for nearly all of the children’s extracurricular activities including all expenses for their participation in sports, Boy Scouts and camp. Donald also stated that he pays for all of the costs associated with their school activities including band instruments, field trips and attendance at school functions.

¶10 Donald contended in his motion that Rhonda’s financial situation has changed considerably since the parties entered into the Agreement. Donald noted that Rhonda was not working at the time they divorced, so her income was not considered in calculating child support. However, since that time, Rhonda has become employed part-time as a physician at the Montana State Hospital in Warm Springs where, according to Donald, she earns a substantial income. *22 Consequently, Donald maintained that because the foundational elements upon which the original child support calculation was based no longer existed, his child support obligation must be modified.

¶11 After briefing by both parties, the District Court entered an order on March 7,2008, stating that the changes alleged by Donald were the kind of changes anticipated by § 40-4-208, MCA. Thus, the court referred the matter to Ann Steffins, with Guidelines Consulting, for a child support calculation, and ordered that upon receipt of Steffens’ calculations, the parties “shall proceed to a Master-supervised Settlement Conference.”

¶12 On June 11,2009, prior to Steffens issuing her report in the child support matter, Rhonda filed a Motion to Amend Parenting Plan claiming that the parties’ 15-year-old son, D.J.D., wanted to live with her full time. Rhonda stated in her motion that ‘D.J.D. desires to assert his right to live [where] he wants subject to routine parental restrictions.” She also stated that she has neither encouraged nor discouraged D.J.D.’s request.

¶13 In an affidavit accompanying the motion, D.J.D. asserted that he would be ‘inore comfortable and less anxious” at his mother’s. D.J.D. also pointed out that his maternal grandparents live next door to his mother, and that he would like to spend more time with them. D.J.D. proposed that he visit his father once a month for a four-day weekend set to coincide with when his younger brothers are at his father’s.

¶14 Steffens issued her report and recommendations regarding child support on June 30, 2009. Attached to her report were three separate child support worksheets. In the first worksheet, Steffens used Rhonda’s actual income to calculate child support resulting in a child support payment from Donald to Rhonda of $488 per month. In the second worksheet, noting that there was no reason Rhonda could not maintain full-time employment, Steffens imputed a larger income to Rhonda resulting in a child support payment from Donald to Rhonda of $83 per month. In the third worksheet, Steffens imputed the same income for Rhonda as in the second worksheet, but she added the cost of including the parties’ oldest child on Donald’s automobile insurance policy. This resulted in a child support payment from Donald to Rhonda of $44 per month.

¶15 Notwithstanding the results of the child support calculations, Steffens recommended that neither Donald nor Rhonda pay any child support to the other parent as long as the three children divide their time equally between their parents.

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2011 MT 297, 265 P.3d 1245, 363 Mont. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-rhonda-and-donald-damsc-mont-2011.