Micheu v. Micheu
This text of 440 So. 2d 240 (Micheu v. Micheu) 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.
Opinion
Anthony T. MICHEU, III
v.
Marilyn Fabre, Wife of Anthony T. MICHEU, III.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*241 Floyd J. Reed, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.
Ross P. La Dart, Gretna, for defendant-appellant.
Before CHEHARDY, BOWES and CURRAULT, JJ.
BOWES, Judge.
Defendant-appellant perfects this appeal from a judgment of the trial court:
1. Ordering an increase in the previous child support award;
2. making absolute a rule for executory judgment for past due support (subject to a credit for payments made after the filing of said rule);
3. making absolute a rule for contempt subject to the proviso that defendant was deemed to have "purged" himself of said contempt by payment of past-due support;
4. awarding attorney's fees to plaintiff in the amount of $1,200.00; and
5. ordering defendant pay all court costs.
We affirm in part, reverse in part, and amend that judgment.
Plaintiff and defendant were divorced in 1975, and have since returned several times to the district court for clarification and changes in child support payments, including at least one other rule for contempt (for failure to pay said support), rules to terminate visitation, contempt of visitation, etc. Suffice it to say for our purposes that the relationship between the parties has, at best, been antagonistic. Prior to the present rule, the trial court, in January of 1980, sentenced defendant to a suspended sentence of 15 days for failure to make support payments; at the same time, defendant was ordered to pay $400.00 per month child support for the two minor children of the marriage, payable in increments of $200.00 on the 12th and 28th of each month, adding that a penalty of $20.00 would be assessed against defendant if the payment due on the 28th was not made before the first of the following month. This last proviso evidently was an attempt to keep the ever-delinquent Mr. Micheu on guard, and prevent his former wife from experiencing unnecessary financial difficulty, inasmuch as her rent was due on the 1st of every month.
The action before us today was filed on April 15, 1982, and styled "Fourth Rule for Contempt, To Make Past Due Child Support Executory, and For Attorney's Fees and For Increase in Child Support." The rule was filed "In Forma Pauperis" by Mrs. Micheu.
On April 23, Mr. Micheu filed a rule to traverse the forma pauperis application of his former wife; and on May 7, he filed a rule for a decrease in child support. (The forma pauperis order was annulled on that day, and Mrs. Micheu ordered to pay all costs incurred in connection with bringing the rule to traverse. This judgment was never appealed and is not at issue before us).
Appellant presents the following specifications of error:
1. That the trial court erred in granting an increase in child support payments.
2. That the trial court erred in denying a reduction in child support payments.
3. That the trial court erred in finding that the appellant was in arrears regarding his obligations to pay child support as per the provisions of the trial court's judgment of January 10, 1980.
4. That the trial court erred in finding that the appellant was in contempt of the provisions of the trial court's judgment of January 10, 1980.
*242 5. That the trial court erred in awarding attorney's fees.
6. Alternatively, the trial court erred in that the award of attorney's fees is excessive.
7. That the trial court erred in ordering that the appellant pay all costs of these proceedings.
Regarding appellant's first two issues that it was error to increase the award and not to decrease the amount, an examination of the record reveals the following pertinent information:
In 1979, the tax year prior to the setting of the $400.00 award, Mr. Micheu and his second wife had a combined income of $27,420.00. In 1980, their combined income was approximately $30,000.00; in 1981, approximately $28,941.94. (The income tax form for 1981 was not filed into evidence and the above sum was computed based on the testimony of Mr. Micheu). Significantly, Mr. Micheu testified that income for 1982 at the time of the trial was approximately at the same rate as the year before, but that he expected to do better in the coming summer months. It should be noted here that Mr. Micheu is an air-conditioning and refrigeration mechanic, who quit his job at General Electric in 1981 to start his own business.
The income of defendant from 1979, just prior to the $400.00 award, and the date of the hearing, did not significantly change, certainly not sufficiently to justify an increase in support to $700.00 per month. Nor do any other factors presented at trial lead us to conclude such an increase was warranted. The former Mrs. Micheu's income increased dramatically, to approximately $25,000, in 1981 (from approximately $6,500.00 at the time of the 1980 rule).
The determination, then, to be made ishas a substantial change of circumstances occurred since the award of alimony, or since the last change in that award? This analysis is to be made each time either spouse files a rule to increase, decrease, or terminate alimony previously granted. Vial v. Vial, 422 So.2d 523 (5th Cir.1982). The court, in the aforementioned decision, has stated that the lower court is bound to limit its inquiry into a substantial change in circumstances of either or both spouses. In the case before us, then, we are bound to consider the increase in Mrs. Micheu's ability to provide support for her children, as well as any substantial change in the children's needs.
In examining the record, and taking the matter as a whole, we find that it was error to increase the child support order: "... in an effort to remedy past inequities, including but not limited to the necessity of a mother working excessive overtime hours, the ramifications of which are viewed by this Court as being detrimental to the well-being of the minor children; namely, Lisa Marie Micheu and Anthony T. Micheu, IV."
The trial judge's admirable effort here to encourage the family unit is not of itself grounds to increase child support. The testimony of plaintiff and of one John Gagliano, a personnel director of plaintiff's employer, disclose that Mrs. Micheu's job requires overtimeovertime of at least eight hours per week is "built in" to the position. Also, as manager, she would likely have to work certain holidays. Overtime does not seem to be a matter of choice for Mrs. Micheu, unless she were to choose resigning or changing her position. As long as she works for Time-Saver, Inc., Mrs. Micheu will probably be obliged to work the same hours, and an increase in child support payments will not change that fact. Should there be a substantial change in her employer's policy regarding overtime, Mrs. Micheu, of course, would be entitled to bring another rule.
We have also concluded, however, that it was not error to deny defendant's motion for a reduction. In Graval v. Graval, 355 So.2d 1057 (4th Cir.1978), the Fourth Circuit stated:
There can be no equivocation about the obligation imposed by Article 227 of the Civil Code. Parents share the obligation of supporting, maintaining, and educating their children. The degree of support is determined by the need of the child and the ability of "those who are to pay *243 it." C.C. Art. 231; Ducote v. Ducote,
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