Marriage of Stich v. Stich

435 N.W.2d 848, 1989 Minn. App. LEXIS 182, 1989 WL 12345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 21, 1989
DocketC0-88-1523
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 435 N.W.2d 848 (Marriage of Stich v. Stich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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 Stich v. Stich, 435 N.W.2d 848, 1989 Minn. App. LEXIS 182, 1989 WL 12345 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

CRIPPEN, Judge.

Appellant challenges the trial court’s determination that support enforcement orders in 1976, 1979 and 1984 eliminated part of the obligation created in the court’s 1975 dissolution decree. Appellant also contends the trial court erred in denying ar-rearages for payments respondent made directly to their youngest child. Both parties contend the trial court erred in denying attorney fees. We reverse and remand for a factual determination of the amount of accumulated arrearages and interest under the original divorce decree, reduced by lawful retroactive downward modification of the award, if any, and for entry of an appropriate judgment.

FACTS

In June 1975, pursuant to a stipulation of the parties, a dissolution decree awarded *850 appellant Darlene Stich, now known as Darlene Dufeck $450 support for four children (then ages five to eight) with the provision that $300 be payable to the Chisa-go County Welfare Department and that $150, although a part of the child support award, be payable to respondent Jerome Stich’s parents to reduce their $7100 second mortgage on the homestead awarded to appellant. The obligation to make payments to the county arose because appellant received AFDC payments for 52 of the months scattered between July 1975 and October 1982, totaling $18,990. The mortgage note to respondent’s parents was paid by appellant in January 1985 when the obligation included a principal balance of $6,042.92 and interest of $5,666.98. Although the principal was reduced from the figure found by the trial court in 1975, there is undisputed evidence that Jerome Stich made none of the payments to his parents which were required by the 1975 decree.

At the conclusion of 1976 contempt proceedings handled by the Chisago County attorney, the court ordered respondent to pay $250 per month child support, all to be delivered to the welfare department. No amendment of the 1975 judgment was ordered and the order does not speak to the original division of the award into welfare and mortgage payments. The motion and order were filed outside the record in the immediate proceedings, in Chisago County file “Reciprocal No. 462.”

A 1979 contempt order, similarly obtained by the county attorney, repeats the 1976 action, again without amending the original judgment. Appellant was not personally present during the 1976 and 1979 proceedings and respondent Jerome Stich appeared without counsel.

In December 1979, respondent’s attorney filed a motion for amending the 1975 judgment to provide for $250 support payments, including $150 to be delivered to his parents. The record shows neither a hearing nor an order on the motion.

In 1984, both parties appeared with private counsel for further child support proceedings. The court ordered respondent to pay $500 per month for four children effective in September 1984 through February 1985, with a reduction to $400 for three children effective March 1, 1985 through August 1986, and then to $200 for one child effective September 1,1986 through February 10, 1988. Although in 1984 the trial court considered and reserved dealing with the topic of payments respondent was to make to his parents, appellant’s final ar-rearage calculations now provided to the trial court abandoned the claim that the obligation for payment to respondent’s parents continued after September 1,1984, the effective date of the changes ordered in the 1984 proceeding.

On June 25, 1987, appellant filed a motion for recovery of $23,985 arrearages, including nonpayment of the $150 obligation, $2,000 for support respondent paid directly to the youngest child for the 10 months of September 1986 through June 1987, and $385 in arrearages claimed for the period through the court proceedings in October 1984. In proposed findings to the trial court and in final arguments submitted on August 12, 1987, appellant calculated her claim as one for $22,522.30. This calculation includes four items: 1) $16,500 for $150 per month payments due between July 1975 and August 1984; 2) $2200 for $50 per month payments ($300 awarded, $250 paid) due in the 44 of 96 months between September 1976 through August 1984 when appellant was not receiving public assistance (thus appellant accepts Chisa-go County’s concession of $50 under the 1976 and 1979 orders for the 52 months she received assistance); 3) $2400 for $200 per month payments due between September 1986 and the hearing in August 1987; and 4) $1,422.30 other arrearages which are calculated by comparing the obligation over the years with a record of payments and which appear from appellant’s figures to trace to payments due between September 1976 and 1982. These calculations take into account a credit of $2,112.70 on respondent’s lien rights on the homestead which was sold in January 1985. In the 1975 decree respondent was awarded a lien of $4320, less one-half of sale costs. Ap *851 pellant also seeks recovery of interest on accumulated arrearages.

On August 3, 1987, respondent filed a motion asking that appellant’s petition be denied, that respondent be presently forgiven for any arrearages that have accumulated, and that subsequent support payments for the youngest child be made directly to the child.

Respondent argued to the trial court that appellant had lost her entitlement for most of the $150 payments to be made to respondent’s parents by reason of the 1976 and 1979 orders setting support at $250. Respondent contended that the orders bound appellant by reason of collateral estoppel and that any present effort to recover the $150 payments requires an unlawful retroactive increase in the support obligation. Respondent’s contention rested on the proposition that Chisago County had the authority to act on behalf of appellant, and respondent claimed that this authority arose because appellant assigned her child support rights to Chisago County in 1978 and 1979, if not earlier by operation of law. Respondent further denied arrearages for the period after September 1986 because as of that month he paid all $200 child support payments directly to his daughter with the consent of appellant.

Finally, respondent asked for retroactive forgiveness both as to the $150 payments, and as to any other arrearages. Respondent offered evidence that he paid the $385 item of arrearages mentioned initially in appellant’s motion documents.

The trial court adopted respondent’s argument that the 1976 and 1979 orders forgave the subsequent obligation of payments to respondent’s parents and that appellant is collaterally estopped from challenging those orders. The court also forgave respondent for the $2400 of support paid directly to his daughter. Resolving conflicting statements of the parties in their affidavits, the trial court found that the direct payments to the daughter had been with appellant’s consent.

The trial court agreed with respondent that he had made a $385 payment on ar-rearages in 1985. Although the court’s order otherwise did not address appellant’s calculation of arrearages, the court forgave all early arrearages.

ISSUES

1. Did the trial court err by denying arrearages owed under the original divorce decree?

2. Did the trial court err by denying $2400 arrearages for the $200 obligation respondent directly paid to the parties’ youngest child?

3.

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Bluebook (online)
435 N.W.2d 848, 1989 Minn. App. LEXIS 182, 1989 WL 12345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-stich-v-stich-minnctapp-1989.