Pamela C. Lichtenwalter v. Chris Edward Lichtenwalter

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 30, 2006
DocketM2003-03115-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pamela C. Lichtenwalter v. Chris Edward Lichtenwalter (Pamela C. Lichtenwalter v. Chris Edward Lichtenwalter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pamela C. Lichtenwalter v. Chris Edward Lichtenwalter, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE February 9, 2005 Session

PAMELA C. LICHTENWALTER v. CHRIS EDWARD LICHTENWALTER

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 91D-575 Muriel Robinson, Judge

No. M2003-03115-COA-R3-CV - Filed January 30, 2006

This appeal illustrates the problems that befall divorcing parents when they agree, without court approval, to a child support arrangement that is inconsistent with the Child Support Guidelines. Five years after the parents’ divorce, the mother filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Davidson County seeking to increase the father’s child support obligation. The trial court approved a formula devised by the parties that did not comply with the Child Support Guidelines. The parties later ignored that formula and followed another ad hoc arrangement for approximately ten years. Eventually, the mother filed a petition in the trial court seeking to hold the father in contempt for failing to pay child support and to collect the arrearage. The trial court turned the matter over to a substitute judge who determined that the father was not in contempt because both parties had followed their formula to the best of their abilities even though it was ambiguous. The trial court also set the father’s support for the remaining minor child and directed the father to pay $2,375 in additional support for that child. The mother appealed. We have determined that the father owes $64,529 in back child support and that the parties’ three children are entitled to this arrearage. Therefore, we vacate the portion of the judgment regarding back child support and remand the case for the entry of an appropriate payment plan.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part and Vacated in Part

WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which PATRICIA J. COTTRELL and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., JJ., joined.

Dan R. Alexander, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Pamela C. Lichtenwalter.

Norman E. Solomon, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Chris Edward Lichtenwalter.

OPINION

I.

Pamela Lichtenwalter and Chris Lichtenwalter had three children during their marriage – Grant who was born in April 1978, Gavin who was born in December 1980, and Kasey who was born in June 1986. The parties were divorced in the Chancery Court for Obion County in October 1986. The decree granted Ms. Lichtenwalter sole custody of the three children and directed Mr. Lichtenwalter to pay $525 per month in child support.1

In February 1991, Ms. Lichtenwalter filed a petition in the Davidson County Probate Court seeking an increase in child support. She stated that Mr. Lichtenwalter’s income had increased significantly2 and that hers had decreased. Following a hearing in January 1992, the probate court increased Mr. Lichtenwalter’s child support to $274.76 per week.3

Ms. Lichtenwalter returned to the probate court in October 1991 seeking another increase in child support. On this occasion, Mr. Lichtenwalter responded by seeking custody of the parties’ oldest child. On November 12, 1992, the court entered an order granting Mr. Lichtenwalter sole custody of the parties’ oldest child. The court also determined that the Child Support Guidelines were “inapplicable as strictly applied” because Mr. Lichtenwalter’s salary fluctuated based on his commissions. Accordingly, the court approved a formula for determining child support that had been created by the parties. This formula provided:

41% of the net income of the parties as computed in accordance with the Uniform Child Support Guidelines is pooled, and agreed as the cost of support of the three minor children. This gross figure shall be divided by three with the Respondent’s support obligation to be the payment of one-third of the gross figure to the Petitioner, but in no event shall this figure be less than Five Hundred Dollars ($500) per month. The child support amount will be computed by the parties on a quarterly basis commencing February 1, 1993. The Respondent shall furnish to the Petitioner a statement of earnings for the three- month period preceding the date for quarterly review. The Respondent’s earning from the previous quarter will be the basis for determining the support obligation of the Respondent for the next quarter. All changes in the support obligation shall be prospective only and reviewed each quarter by the parties.4

1 The Child Support Guidelines were not in effect when this decree was entered. They did not take effect until October 1989.

2 Mr. Lichtenwalter worked for the University of Tennessee when the parties divorced and was earning $20,184 per year. He left the University and became a salesman for Institutional Jobbers earning over $48,000 per year.

3 This child support order was consistent with the Child Support Guidelines.

4 This formula is entirely inconsistent with the Child Support Guidelines. It did not establish a fixed amount of child support, and it took the custodial parent’s income into consideration.

-2- For reasons not apparent in this record, the parties agreed to ignore the formula contained in the November 12, 1992 order and never returned to court to modify or replace it. Instead, they simply agreed that the amount of support for each child should be $500 and that the amount of support they would be entitled to would be based on the number of children living with them. As a result, Mr. Lichtenwalter began paying Ms. Lichtenwalter $500 per month because two children were living with her and only one with him. After the parties’ oldest child, Grant, reached majority and graduated from high school in June 1996, Mr. Lichtenwalter began paying Ms. Lichtenwalter $1,000 per month because the parties remaining two minor children continued to live with Ms. Lichtenwalter. After Gavin Lichtenwalter reached majority and graduated from high school in June 1999, Mr. Lichtenwalter reduced his child support payments to $500 per month.

In July 2003, Ms. Lichtenwalter filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Davidson County seeking to hold Mr. Lichtenwalter in criminal contempt for failing to pay the child support required by the November 12, 1992 order and to order him to pay a $39,600 child support arrearage. Mr. Lichtenwalter responded by denying that he had willfully failed to pay child support and by requesting the court to terminate his child support obligations for the parties’ two oldest children who had turned eighteen and who had graduated from high school in June 1996 and June 1999 respectively.5

The matter was heard on October 20, 2003, and seven days later, the substitute judge filed a memorandum opinion. The judge declined to hold Mr. Lichtenwalter in contempt because he had complied with his agreement with Ms. Lichtenwalter that each child would be entitled to $500 per month in child support. The judge also determined that the child support formula in the November 12, 1992 order was “ambiguous” because it did not provide for a definite amount of child support as required by Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-101(a)(2)(A) (Supp. 2003).6 Notwithstanding the evidence that Mr. Lichtenwalter’s income would have called for a far greater amount of child support, the substitute judge decided that the parties, by their conduct over ten years, had agreed to limit the amount of child support to $500 per child and, therefore, that Mr. Lichtenwalter did not owe back child support.

The parties had one remaining minor child at the time of the October 2003 hearing. Accordingly, the substitute judge, using the Child Support Guidelines, set Mr. Lichtenwalter’s support for this child at $975 per month retroactive to July 2003.

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Pamela C. Lichtenwalter v. Chris Edward Lichtenwalter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pamela-c-lichtenwalter-v-chris-edward-lichtenwalter-tennctapp-2006.