Massarelli, L. v. Massarelli, A.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 9, 2022
Docket20 WDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Massarelli, L. v. Massarelli, A. (Massarelli, L. v. Massarelli, A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massarelli, L. v. Massarelli, A., (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A18039-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

LISA RENEE MASSARELLI : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : ANTHONY MASSARELLI : : Appellant : No. 20 WDA 2022

Appeal from the Order Entered December 9, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Civil Division at No(s): FD 20-00087-002

BEFORE: STABILE, J., MURRAY, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY McLAUGHLIN, J.: FILED: NOVEMBER 9, 2022

Anthony Massarelli (“Husband”) appeals the dismissal of his petition to

modify child support, and the grant of the petition to enforce an Interim

Support Settlement Agreement (“Agreement”), which was filed by Lisa Renee

Massarelli (“Wife”). Husband argues he was entitled to relief due to changed

circumstances. However, the changed circumstances he asserts are not the

sort for which the Agreement permits modification. We therefore affirm.

Husband and Wife were married in September 2000 and separated in

September 2020. The parties have two children, A.M. (“Son”), born in

September 2002, and J.M. (“Daughter”), born in August 2006. Both children

reside with Wife. N.T., 8/16/21, at 42.

In September 2020, Husband and Wife entered into the written

Agreement. Id. at 10, 33. The Agreement stipulates that Husband is to pay

$3,000 per month in unallocated support, Wife and children’s phone bills, J-A18039-22

Wife’s gasoline credit card, and 58% of educational and extracurricular

expenses for both children upon request by Wife. Id. at 11-12, 33; Hr’g Ex. A

(“Agreement”), at 2. The Agreement provides the parties entered the

Agreement “for purposes of settling, on an interim basis, their current disputes

regarding child support, spousal support, maintenance, and alimony pendente

lite.” See Agreement at 1. Further, the Agreement states that payments can

be adjusted if there are substantial changes in the parties’ incomes and

children’s needs and/or substantial changes in the insurance expenses for the

family:

[I]t is understood and agreed that said payments shall be adjusted upward or downward in accordance with substantial changes in the respective incomes of the parties and the needs of their children, and/or substantial changes in the expenses of insurance for the family.

Id. at p.2.

On June 4, 2021, Husband filed a petition to modify the monthly support

amount. Wife filed a petition to enforce the Agreement. The petitions were

consolidated into a single hearing that was held in August 2021. After the

hearing, the Hearing Officer recommended that Husband’s petition be denied,

and that Wife’s petition be granted.1

At the hearing, Husband requested that the court modify the support

amount to include one child, claiming Son was emancipated. N.T. at 9, 21. He

asked the court to order support pursuant to the child support guidelines, ____________________________________________

1Husband filed for divorce in July 2021, after filing the petition to modify but before the hearing.

-2- J-A18039-22

which would be $898 for child support for one child and $536 for alimony

pendente lite, for a total support award of $1,424. Id. at 21-22. Husband

claimed Son was emancipated because Son had graduated from high school

in June 2021 and elected to forgo college by entering the workforce as a full-

time employee. Before the date of his high school graduation and after his

18th birthday, Son became a partial owner of Husband’s landscaping

company, which he had been working at annually from the months of April

through November since the age of 14. Id. 25, 33-34. Neither party disputes

that when the Agreement was signed, it was their understanding that Son

would attend college following his graduation from high school. Husband

claims that Son’s emancipation following his high school graduation and his

decision not to attend college but to work as a full-time employee constituted

a substantial change for support purposes. Id. at 9.

Wife countered that no substantial change had occurred in the needs of

Son because Son continued to reside at her residence, earned a similar wage

as when employed during high school, and relied on her for food expenses.

Id. at 37-38, 42. Wife’s counsel noted that Son is unable to withdrawal funds

from his allotted 30 percent of the company, which is retained within the

company’s business account. Id. 31-32. Wife further testified that Son’s

annual income remained similar to what it had been in past years. See Wife’s

Ex. 1 (showing Son’s 2020 income). Finally, Wife argued that Husband’s

income has not decreased and that he had not displayed an inability to fulfill

the Agreement. Id. 41-42; Ex. D.

-3- J-A18039-22

The Hearing Officer recommended that the Agreement be enforced,

concluding no substantial change as delineated in the Agreement occurred:

[Husband] testified he is seeking a modification to the support amount as the parties’ older child is now emancipated. The agreement is dated 9/10/2020 and their older child turned 18 years old shortly thereafter and then graduated from high school on 6/3/2021. The Agreement does not provide that the support amount is to be adjusted upon emancipation. [Husband] failed to demonstrate “substantial changes in the respective incomes of the parties and the needs of their children, and/or substantial changes in the expenses of insurance for the family.” As such, [Husband’s] request to modify the Agreement is denied.

Hr’g Summ. Sept. 8, 2021, at 2.

Husband filed exceptions to the decision of the Hearing Officer, and the

trial court denied the exceptions in December 2021. Husband filed a notice of

appeal.

Husband raises the following issues:

I. Whether the trial court erred in failing to find that a substantial change in the child’s needs occurred, as of June 3, 2021, due to the parties’ oldest child being emancipated, employed on a full-time basis, earning a full-time income, and not attending college, and therefore, warrants a modification in the support obligation.

II. Whether the trial court erred in the failing to calculate [Husband’s] support obligation without the emancipated child, by finding that a child’s emancipation and decision not to attend college to secure full time employment is not a substantial change.

III. Whether the trial court erred in concluding that [Husband’s] support obligation should not be modified, even though a substantial change existed, and adjusting said arrears.

-4- J-A18039-22

IV. Whether the trial court erroneously speculated that the Interim Support Agreement is a Final Order/Agreement that provides for Unallocated Spousal Support, rather than an Unallocated Child Support order.

V. Whether the trial court erroneously failed to find that spousal support was no longer applicable, as [Husband] filed for divorce after the parties reached their agreement.

Husband’s Br. at vii-viii.

A. Jurisdiction

Before we address Husband’s claims, we will address Mother’s claim that

the award in the contract was for spousal support and therefore unappealable.

Pursuant to Section 3105 of the Divorce Code, a provision in an

agreement between parties regarding child support shall be subject to

modification upon a showing of changed circumstances, but a provision

regarding alimony shall not be subject to court modification:

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