Michael A. Huseth v. Tavia M. Huseth

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 2012
Docket2012-CA-01576-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Michael A. Huseth v. Tavia M. Huseth (Michael A. Huseth v. Tavia M. Huseth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael A. Huseth v. Tavia M. Huseth, (Mich. 2012).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2012-CA-01576-SCT

MICHAEL A. HUSETH

v.

TAVIA M. HUSETH

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/14/2012 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. DENISE OWENS TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: MARK. A CHINN WILLIAM R. WRIGHT COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CHANCERY COURT OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF HINDS COUNTY ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: MARK A. CHINN MATTHEW THOMPSON ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: AMANDA JANE PROCTOR WILLIAM R. WRIGHT NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED - 04/10/2014 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WALLER, C.J., KITCHENS AND COLEMAN, JJ.

KITCHENS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Michael Huseth (Mike) appeals the judgment of the Chancery Court of the First

Judicial District of Hinds County which granted his wife Tavia Huseth (Tavia) an award of

separate maintenance, full physical custody of their son, and attorney fees. Tavia has

requested attorney fees on appeal equal to half of the fees she was awarded at trial. We affirm

the chancellor’s judgment in part, reverse it in part and remand the case to the chancery

court, and we deny Tavia’s request for attorney fees on appeal. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Mike and Tavia have been married since 1998. They have one child together, who was

born April 9, 1999. The couple separated in October 2011. Mike claims that the couple’s

stormy relationship ended “when Tavia punched Mike in the side” and told him to pack his

bags and get out. Mike claims that he had a number of pictures on his phone from previous

instances of Tavia’s hitting him, which Tavia had found and erased. On the night in question,

Mike took a picture of a bruise he claims to have suffered when Tavia “sucker punched” him

in the kidney. According to him, when Mike said to Tavia that she could not delete the

picture, she told him to pack his bags and “get the hell out of there.” At that point, Mike left.

He claims that, after their separation, Tavia prevented him from seeing his son, at one point

forcing him to leave the school the son attends and telling Mike that he shouldn’t be there.

¶3. Tavia’s version of events, which generally was not disputed by Mike, provides a more

expansive story. In October 2011, the couple went to San Diego to see Mike’s son from a

previous marriage as he returned home from Afghanistan. When they returned to Jackson,

Mike left home and told Tavia he needed to “cool off for no more than two weeks” and get

some marital therapy. Mike returned on October 27, 2011, and met Tavia for lunch.

According to Tavia, when she sat down, Mike handed her his divorce attorney’s business

card and told her, “It’s over.” They continued discussing the matter in the driveway of their

home, and Mike kept repeating to Tavia that the marriage was over. Later that evening, Mike

returned and told Tavia that he was going to come home and live with her again. That night,

the two had sexual relations. The next day, Mike took their son to school and did not return.

When Tavia asked him what was going on, Mike again told her that it was over.

2 ¶4. The next month, Mike filed a petition for divorce based upon irreconcilable

differences. He continued to pay the household bills through January 2012. Tavia claims that

she did not want a divorce, and after two postponed mediations, Mike dismissed the

complaint for divorce and filed a petition seeking sole legal and physical custody of the

couple’s son. He did not ask for joint custody. Tavia filed a countercomplaint, seeking

separate maintenance and custody. Prior to this separation, Mike had paid most of the

household bills, but he admitted that his parents had loaned him the money to pay almost all

of these amounts. Tavia alleged that she did not in any way cause Mike to leave the marital

home and relationship, that she depended upon Mike to support and maintain herself and

their child, and that she was therefore entitled to separate maintenance until Mike returned

home. She also asked for physical custody of their son and attorney fees. Mike argued that

she was completely at fault for his departure from the home, and that she specifically had

asked for him to leave with no intention of reconciling.

¶5. The chancellor held a hearing on both parties’ pleadings on August 8 and 9, 2012.

Extensive testimony was elicited regarding Mike’s income, work history, and earning

potential. Over the course of the marriage, Mike held several different jobs. Mike has a

degree in economics, a master’s degree in public administration, and a master’s degree in

Biblical studies. He currently is the president of Lakin Enterprises, a company owned by his

mother and stepfather. At the time of trial in August 2012, that company owned one rental

property. Mike’s duties as president include “communicating with the attorneys . . . we have

and then also the CPA, and the accountant and then with the folks that lease our building

over on Highway 18.” When asked whether usually there was a day in the week when he had

3 anything to do with Lakin Enterprises, he replied, “There is not a whole lot, no. I mean I have

to balance the accounts and I check the balance every day.” For this job, Mike is paid

$3,709.06 per month. From 2006 to 2010, Mike also worked at the Lutheran Episcopal

Services Agency (“LES”). When he was terminated in 2010, Mike was being paid $114,000

a year by LES. Since losing that job, Mike’s only source of income has been from Lakin

Enterprises. Tavia is a social worker at Baptist Medical Center. She is paid approximately

$5,122.16 per month after taxes.

¶6. Mike and Tavia gave testimony regarding their respective fitness to have custody of

their son, each person’s relative earning capacity and present income, and the reasons for

their separation. Mike and Tavia were cross examined thoroughly. At the hearing, Mike

testified that he really wanted joint custody of their child, but had filed for sole custody on

the advice of his attorney. Tavia and Mike agreed that Mike was a good father, and Tavia

said she was seeking joint legal and sole physical custody of their son, with provisions for

reasonable visitation for Mike. Beyond testifying about his income, Mike elaborated

concerning the money he had borrowed from his parents to pay his bills, as well as the more

than $200,000 house his parents had purchased for him so his son could have a good

environment while visiting his father. He testified that, after the separation, Tavia would not

allow him in the marital home, she had dumped all of his clothes in the driveway, and she

would not permit him to retrieve his personal effects, including his bicycle. Tavia testified

that she verbally had asked Mike several times to come home and he had refused. She

testified that, if he asked to come home that night, she would let him.

4 ¶7. The chancellor found that Tavia’s fault in causing the separation was not equal to or

greater than Mike’s and awarded her separate maintenance in the amount of $3,000 per

month and child support in the amount of $988 per month. The chancellor ordered Mike to

bring the mortgage current and instructed Tavia to pay the $2,248 per month mortgage out

of the $3,000 monthly separate maintenance payment, leaving $752 per month in additional

support. To determine the amounts of these awards, the chancellor looked beyond Mike’s

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