Meeks v. Meeks

757 So. 2d 364, 2000 Miss. App. LEXIS 212, 2000 WL 559191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMay 9, 2000
DocketNo. 1998-CA-01183-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 757 So. 2d 364 (Meeks v. Meeks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meeks v. Meeks, 757 So. 2d 364, 2000 Miss. App. LEXIS 212, 2000 WL 559191 (Mich. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

SOUTHWICK, P.J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Laurie Meeks sought to have terms of an agreed property settlement and support agreement modified eight months after it was entered. The chancellor determined that there were no material and unanticipated changes in circumstances that would justify a modification. Mrs. Meeks appeals and argues that the chancellor’s finding was erroneous and that additional child support should be paid. Various issues are raised that allegedly flow from that error. With the exception of the chancellor’s failure to address withholding of support payments from Sean Meeks’s paycheck, we find no clear error committed by the chancellor and affirm. We reverse and remand as to withholding.

FACTS

¶ 2. Laurie Lynn Meeks and Sean Justin Meeks were married on December 14, 1991. One child, Jacob Hunter Meeks, was born during their marriage. On May 6, 1997, the couple agreed to a divorce based on irreconcilable differences. The divorce decree imposed weekly child support obligations on Mr. Meeks and required him to maintain an insurance policy on Jacob, as well as pay one-half of the child’s medical expenses. Primary custody was given to the mother, but the father had substantial visitation rights. A property settlement agreement was also entered.

¶ 3. Eight months later, on January 13, 1998, Mrs. Meeks filed a complaint seeking a variety of relief. She wished to increase the amount of child support, to require her former husband to pay his portion of the medical expenses incurred for the child, and to have Mr. Meeks found in contempt for failing to comply with various portions of the divorce decree. Mr. Meeks filed a counterclaim seeking a change in primary custody because of an alleged substantial and material change in circumstances adverse to the welfare of the child.

¶ 4. An order was entered on May 26, 1998, resolving the issues raised by Mr. Meeks’s counterclaim. That order has not been appealed.

¶ 5. On June 17, 1998, a separate hearing was held on the merits of Mrs. Meeks’s complaint. Both former spouses testified and there were no other witnesses. The chancellor denied all relief.

DISCUSSION

¶ 6. We are presented with seven numbered issues. For convenience, we combine some of them.

I. Proof of material change in circumstance

¶ 7. Mrs. Meeks argues that soon after the May 1997 divorce, her income dropped due to her loss of a well-paying job; she argued that her ex-husband’s income increased. The chancellor was unpersuaded that a substantial and unanticipated change in the parties’ circumstances had occurred.

¶ 8. Mrs. Meeks is correct that a child support award may be altered if it is shown that there has been a substantial change in the circumstances of either parent or the child arising subsequent to the earlier decree. Overstreet v. Overstreet, 692 So.2d 88, 92 (Miss.1997). If substantial evidence supports the chancellor’s findings of fact on these issues, those findings are beyond this Court’s power to disturb. Morris v. Morris, 541 So.2d 1040, 1042 (Miss.1989).

¶ 9. Slight changes in the father’s income or children’s expenses do not constitute a material change in circumstances requiring an increase in the father’s child support obligations. Tedford v. Dempsey, [367]*367437 So.2d 410, 418 (Miss.1983). In addition, changes in support obligations should only occur because of material “changes occurring after the original decree and not anticipated by the parties at the time of the agreement.” Shipley v. Ferguson, 638 So.2d 1295, 1298 (Miss.1994). Making anticipation a factor is not just an example of stray words making their way into court opinions. Unlike other litigation in which what is done usually remains done, a domestic relations case is subject to frequent petitions to address new matters that arise after the earlier decree. However, that is not an unfettered opportunity to undermine previous decisions. What the supreme court requires is that the justification for a change in custody, support, or alimony be events for which allowance could not reasonably have been made at the time of the previous ruling.

¶ 10. At the hearing during which both parents testified, the chancellor heard confusing and elliptical testimony. Mrs. Meeks testified that she had been earning a $30,000 annual salary working for her physician father. By the time of the hearing in June 1998 her father was retired and she had lost that job. She stated that she started a new job on March 30, 1998, working for a hospital for $150 per week. She was then terminated from that job near the end of May 1998 and was exploring recertification as a teacher. What makes this confusing is that she indicated that she had worked for the hospital for about ten months at the time of being terminated, which would mean that she started in July 1997 and not March 1998. If she found a new job about two months after the divorce decree was entered in May 1997, and since even before starting the new job she said that she knew that her father was retiring, this raises serious concerns about what she knew at the time of the divorce.

¶ 11. All we can say is that the record is confused and incomplete. The chancellor in his order denying modification said generally that the “parties should have anticipated at the time they signed the agreement [in May 1997] all issues raised at this time.” The party seeking modification has the burden of proving entitlement to it, which includes proof on the issue of the unexpected nature to the changes in circumstances. The record reveals suspicions and few hard facts.

¶ 12. Mr. Meeks’s financial situation was also the subject of considerable scrutiny. He testified that he was still employed by the company for which he had worked at the time of the divorce. Since that time, he had received a promotion and an increase in pay. He earned an average of about $535 per week from his work with Intex at the time of the hearing. He estimated that his income for 1997 was approximately $30,000 in base salary but an additional $15,000 in overtime pay. Considerable debate among the parties and their counsel arose as to whether this $15,000 actually represented money from a second job of welding. No direct evidence of anything but incidental income from welding was introduced.- Mrs. Meeks agreed that while the parties were still married her husband was being trained and working on his certification as a welder.

¶ 13. One problem with the evidence is that Mr. Meeks did not submit a financial statement in accordance with Chancery Rule 8.05. Whether such a written statement would have been any clearer than the testimony might be doubted, though the filing is supposed to include recent tax returns and other documents. As we point out below, the only relevant tax return had not yet been prepared.. The rule itself states that filing can be excused for good cause. Unif. Ch. Ct. R. 8.05; see Bland v. Bland, 629 So.2d 582, 587 (Miss.1993) (based on the chancellor’s rulings, supreme court assumed that the chancellor excused the need for a financial statement). The one relevant reference in the record is that an objection was made to Mr. Meeks’s testifying about his income without having submitted the required financial state[368]*368ment. The chancellor overruled the objection since “it is important for me to hear this information.” We find no ease law that failure to file the statement per se

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757 So. 2d 364, 2000 Miss. App. LEXIS 212, 2000 WL 559191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meeks-v-meeks-missctapp-2000.