Michael Wayne Basile v. Rebecca Elizabeth Bombet Basile

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 12, 2004
DocketCA-0004-0025
StatusUnknown

This text of Michael Wayne Basile v. Rebecca Elizabeth Bombet Basile (Michael Wayne Basile v. Rebecca Elizabeth Bombet Basile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Wayne Basile v. Rebecca Elizabeth Bombet Basile, (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

04-25

MICHAEL WAYNE BASILE

VERSUS

REBECCA ELIZABETH BOMBET BASILE

********** APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 97-C-3283-C HONORABLE ALONZO HARRIS, DISTRICT JUDGE **********

GLENN B. GREMILLION JUDGE

**********

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Glenn B. Gremillion and *John B. Scofield, Judges.

*Honorable John B. Scofield participated in this decision by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court as Judge Pro Tempore.

REVERSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN PART.

Charles E. Soileau Bertrand & Soileau P. O. Box 5 Rayne, LA 70578-0005 (337) 334-2139 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant Michael Wayne Basile Michael Brent Hicks McGlinchey, Stafford, PLLC One American Place, 9th Floor Baton Rouge, LA 70825 (225) 383-9000 Counsel for Intervenor/Appellee Cumberland Academy d/b/a Gables Academy, Inc.

J. Christopher Alexander, Esq. P. O. Box 83101 Baton Rouge, LA 70884 (225) 926-2828 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee Rebecca Elizabeth Bombet Basile GREMILLION, Judge.

In this case, the defendant-appellant, Michael Wayne Basile, appeals the

trial court’s judgment ordering him to pay the intervenor, Cumberland Academy d/b/a

Gables Academy, $14,000 for past educational expenses, and $838 in child support

per month to the plaintiff, Rebecca Elizabeth Bombet Basile, pursuant to La.R.S.

9:315.22 (C). For the following reasons, we reverse in part and affirm in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Rebecca and Michael were married in June 1983, and their only child,

Emily, was born in May 1985. Michael filed for divorce in August 1997, and the

divorce was granted in March 1998. In November 1998, Rebecca filed a rule for

modification of child support, citing material changes in circumstance. Rebecca then

filed a rule for contempt of court, attorney’s fees, and rental value, claiming that

Michael was not paying school tuition as agreed upon in a February 1998 joint

stipulation. In February 2000, Michael filed a motion and order to reduce child

support. Following a hearing, the trial court reduced the monthly child support and

maintenance sum from $1,100 to $838; the reduction representing Michael’s former

share of Emily’s private school tuition.

In December 2002, Rebecca filed a motion to determine and make past

due support executory and for expedited hearing and costs claiming that Michael had

not made a child support payment since March 2002. Michael answered claiming that

Rebecca unilaterally moved Emily to a psychiatric boarding school in Georgia called

Gables Academy, which charges a yearly tuition of $36,000. Michael claimed that the

February 2, 2000 child support order was still in effect and did not extend to

1 placement at this new school. Following a hearing in January 22, 2003, the trial court

issued a judgment in April 2003, in favor of Rebecca ordering Michael to pay child

support arrearages in the amount of $8,382, subject to a credit of $2,240.43 (for a total

owed of $6,141.57).

In June 2003, Rebecca filed a petition to enforce child support and for

arrearages and a rule for contempt. Rebecca claimed that Michael ceased paying child

support when Emily turned eighteen on May 7, 2003. Rebecca claimed that, pursuant

to La.R.S. 9:315.22(C), Michael was obligated to continue paying support. Michael

answered urging that Emily was not enrolled in an accredited high school or technical

school and that he was justified in discontinuing child support payments pursuant to

La.R.S. 9:315.22(A). In August 2003, Gables Academy filed an Intervention claiming

that Rebecca and Michael failed to pay $41,825.71 in tuition for Emily while she

attended Gables Academy from January 2002 to April 2003. Gables Academy prayed

that Michael pay it directly for its extraordinary services pursuant to La.R.S. 9:315.6

and 9:315.8

Following a trial held in April, July, and August 2003, the trial court

issued its judgment and ordered that the child support obligation, in the amount of

$838 per month, continue until Emily attained the age of nineteen. The trial court also

ordered Michael to pay one-half of the $28,000 tuition due for the past year directly

to Gables Academy.

Michael, thereafter, filed a motion for new trial, which was denied.

Michael now appeals.

2 ISSUES

Michael assigns as error:

1. The trial court’s award of child support payments to Rebecca for the period of twelve months after Emily turned eighteen.

2. The trial court’s award of $14,000 to Gables Academy for past educational expenses.

3. Alternatively, the trial court failed to give him credit, against he lump sum award, for the amounts of monthly child support payments made by him to Rebecca for Emily’s benefit.

4. The trial court’s allowing an evaluation report of Dr. John Bolter into evidence over his objection.

Gables Academy also filed a brief urging that the trial court’s ruling

ordering Michael to pay it $14,000 was not erroneous.

LA.R.S. 9:315.22

Louisiana Revised Statutes 9:315.22 states (emphasis added):

A. When there is a child support award in a specific amount per child, the award for each child shall terminate automatically without any action by the obligor upon each child’s attaining the age of majority, or upon emancipation relieving the child of the disabilities attached to minority.

....

C. An award of child support continues with respect to any unmarried child who attains the age of majority or to a child who is emancipated relieving the child of the disabilities attached to minority. As long as the child is a full-time student in good standing in a secondary school, has not attained the age of nineteen, and is dependent upon either parent. Either the primary domiciliary parent or the major or emancipated child is the proper party to enforce an award of child support pursuant to this Subsection.

3 Michael urges that Rebecca failed to prove that Emily was a “full-time

student in good standing.” Emily attained the age of eighteen on May 7, 2003. She

began the “Edge” program administered by Gables Academy, although approximately

eighty miles from the Gables Academy school, in January 2002, and graduated from

that program on April 19, 2003. The “Edge” program is a “wilderness type

experience.” Rebecca testified that the actual cost was $36,000 for twelve months of

attendance, but that Emily’s program extended approximately four months for a grand

total of $42,000. Rebecca testified that she paid $11,666 in tuition for the school year

of 2002, and borrowed $14,000, leaving $28,000 owed for the first year of attendance.

Rebecca testified that the amount she paid was 32% because that is what she “was told

to pay according to what we had done in a previous court hearing here.”

Rebecca testified that Emily began her second year in the “Next Step”

program on April 19, 2003, upon graduating from the “Edge” program. She testified

that the 2003 tuition would be $39,000 and that she was paying her portion by

working there for free. Emily then moved on to a program at Shepherd’s Hill Farm,

which Rebecca testified has provisional accreditation with the state of Georgia.

Rebecca also works at Shepherd’s Hill Farm as a nurse and therapist for the children

and families attending the program. Rebecca testified that, at the Shepherd’s Hill

program, Emily attended school from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

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Related

Bertrand v. Bertrand
637 So. 2d 531 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)
Dempsey v. Stevens
611 So. 2d 815 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1992)

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