Mills v. Mills (In Re Mills)

163 B.R. 198, 30 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1119, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 50, 1994 WL 22347
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1994
Docket18-22458
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 163 B.R. 198 (Mills v. Mills (In Re Mills)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. Mills (In Re Mills), 163 B.R. 198, 30 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1119, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 50, 1994 WL 22347 (Kan. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JOHN T. FLANNAGAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The debtor, Joe Linn Mills, appears by his attorney, Stephen B. Angermayer of Klenda, Mitchell, Austerman & Zuercher, Wichita, Kansas. The defendant, Marilyn Mills, appears by her attorney, Eric D. Bruce of Bruce & Davis, Wichita, Kansas.

In-response to debtor’s Complaint to Determine Dischargeability of Debts incurred in a divorce action, Marilyn Mills, his former spouse, filed a motion for abstention. The motion is denied for the reasons stated.

To understand what debts the Complaint addresses, we must review in some detail the prior divorce action in which Marilyn was the petitioner and Joe Linn Mills the respondent.

Marilyn Mills sued Joe Mills for divorce on April 16, 1987, in the District Court of Grant County, Kansas. On that day, the District Court of Grant County entered an ex parte order stating,

2. That the respondent [Joe Mills] shall pay support for the petitioner [Marilyn Mills] in the amount of $1,350.00 per month....
6. This order is temporary and shall be in force only until the trial of this action or until modified by the Court.

(Ex parte Order filed April 16, 1987, In the Matter of the Marriage of Mills, Case No. 87-D-21 in the District Court of Grant County, Kansas, at 3.)

On January 7, 1988, the state court granted the parties a divorce and reserved decision on the issue of property division pending the summation of the parties’ proposals. *200 The court ordered maintenance and support continued according to its previous orders. (Journal Entry and Decree of Divorce filed January 7, 1988, In the Matter of the Marriage of Mills, Case No. 87-D-21 in the District Court of Grant County, Kansas, at 1.)

According to a document dated January 29, 1988, file-marked February 1, 1988, entitled “Court’s Findings,” the parties stipulated in the divorce case that their total fixed assets amounted to $327,338.44. The court awarded Marilyn property valued at $182,-525.79. Joe received the balance of the marital estate valued at $144,812.64. Marilyn was awarded $500.00 per month in maintenance and $4,700.00 for attorney’s fees. (Court’s Findings filed February 1, 1988, In the Matter of the Marriage of Mills, Case No. 87-D-21 in the District Court of Grant County, Kansas, at 1-2.) Additionally, the court dealt with Joe Mills’s pension plan from Co-lumbian Chemicals Company. In relevant part, the “Court’s Findings” stated:

The most difficult asset to evaluate is the vested retirement held by the respondent from Columbian Chemicals Company. This retirement shows an eligibility for .retirement at age sixty-two of $2,108.62 per month. At the date of the hearing both petitioner and respondent were sixty-one years of age. It should be noted that the retirement was vested at least as early as December the 1st, 1985. Although the respondent continues to work, and the evidence reflected a salary of at least sixty thousand dollars a year, this retirement being vested, is an asset of the parties and should be included as part of the property division herein. It should be noted, also, that this retirement would become available during the year 1988 to the respondent if he elected to accept the same.
The Court therefore concludes that a division of this property asset will t require payment from respondent to the petitioner of $1,000.00 per month on the assumption that the benefit is approximately $2,000.00 per month as of the date of the hearing.

Id. at 1 (emphasis added).

Marilyn filed a Motion for Clarification of the divorce court’s findings on March 8,1988. She sought to determine how the cash value of life insurance policies should be divided; and whether Joe was required, at his own expense, to maintain medical insurance coverage for her. The motion was noticed for hearing at 10:00 a.m. April 11,1988. (Motion for Clarification of Court’s Findings filed March 8,1988, In the Matter of the Marriage of Mills, Case No. 87-D-21 in the District Court of Grant County, Kansas.)

At the April 11, 1988, hearing, counsel made an announcement that was later recited in an order filed August 17, 1988:

[T]he parties announce to the Court, through this Order, that they have reached an amicable resolution of the issues presented in the motion filed by Marilyn L. Mills. That the resolution is that all cash value in all life insurance policies not disposed of by the Court’s previous order shall be divided equally between Marilyn L. Mills and Joe L. Mills_
Secondly, both parties hereto agree that Joe L. Mills shall continue to maintain and pay for the expense of medical-dental insurance coverage on Marilyn L. Mills, as-previously maintained prior to the divorce, until she reaches age 65 or Joe L. Mills is no longer employed by his current employer, whichever occurs first.

(Order filed August 17, 1988, In the Matter of the Marriage of Mills, Case No. 87-D-21 in the District Court of Grant County, Kansas, at 1.)

Contrary to the agreement recited in the state court order memorializing the April 11 hearing, Joe failed to provide medical and dental insurance coverage for Marilyn.

According to a journal entry filed February 7, 1991, Joe’s failure to pay for medical and dental insurance for Marilyn prompted her. to bring the matter before the court again on December 6, 1990. The journal entry file-stamped February 7, 1991, shows that at the December 6 hearing, the divorce court ordered: “[T]hat upon the filing of a listing of unpaid medical expenses incurred by Marilyn L. Mills since the divorce was granted with the Clerk of the District Court, Grant County, Kansas, the same shall become a judgment against Joe L. Mills for the *201 unpaid sums, pursuant to the order of the Court for Joe L. Mills to maintain medical insurance.” (Journal Entry filed February 7, 1991, In the Matter of the Marriage of Mills, Case No. 87-D-21 in the District Court of Grant County, Kansas, at 2.)

In accordance with the court’s order, on December 12, 1990, Marilyn filed a Notice that listed unpaid medical bills totaling $19,-518.40. (Notice and Filing of Unpaid Medical Bills as Part of Judgment in Divorce Proceedings filed December 12, 1990, at 3.)

If the terms of the divorce court’s order announced December 6, 1990, and filed February 7, 1991, are operative, by the filing of her notice, Marilyn obtained a $19,518.40 judgment against Joe for unpaid medical bills effective upon the filing of the journal entry.

On January 7, 1991, the state court entered a nunc pro tunc order setting aside to Marilyn Mills as her separate property all of the parties’ interest in real property situated in Bourbon County, Kansas. In justification of that order, the court stated that it had “inadvertently omitted” this division from its previous findings and orders. (Order Nunc Pro Tunc filed January 7, 1991, In the Matter of the Marriage of Mills, Case No.

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163 B.R. 198, 30 Collier Bankr. Cas. 2d 1119, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 50, 1994 WL 22347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-mills-in-re-mills-ksb-1994.