Patricia Sadler v. Lawrence Sadler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 11, 2001
DocketE2000-02110-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Patricia Sadler v. Lawrence Sadler (Patricia Sadler v. Lawrence Sadler) 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
Patricia Sadler v. Lawrence Sadler, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE May 9, 2001 Session

PATRICIA JANE SADLER v. LAWRENCE DAVID SADLER

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Knox County No. 60167 Bill Swann, Judge

FILED JULY 11, 2001

No. E2000-02110-COA-R3-CV

This is a post-divorce child support dispute with a series of hearings and orders stretching over a 29- month period. Lawrence David Sadler (“Father”), the obligor parent, appeals the last order entered below, in which the trial court found him in arrears and awarded Patricia Jane Sadler (“Mother”) her attorney’s fees of $6,262.50. Because we find that the referee’s action, as approved by the trial court in the subject order, retroactively modified Father’s child support obligation and erroneously found Father to be in arrears in his child support obligation, we reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed; Case Remanded

CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS and D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JJ., joined.

David L. Valone, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lawrence David Sadler.

No appearance for the appellee, Patricia Jane Sadler.

OPINION

I.

The parties were divorced in 1993.1 Three children were born to their union: Lindsay Ann Sadler, Cassandra Lee Sadler, and Tracey Marie Sadler. Although the children’s dates of birth are not reflected in the record, deposition testimony received at the last hearing below, October 6, 1999, indicates that the children were then approximately 21, 18, and 15 years old, respectively.

1 The judgment of divorce and the parties’ marital dissolution agreement are not in the record. On August 7, 1997, a post-divorce, agreed order was entered below, finding that Father had accumulated a child support arrearage of $14,000.2 The agreed order provides that effective August 1, 1997, Father would pay Mother 50% of his monthly benefits received from the Veterans Administration and the Social Security Administration.3 This payment included the following: $650 was designated as general child support for the parties’ two remaining minor children; $150 was designated as payment for the children’s health insurance; $125 was for payment of the children’s automobile insurance; and the remainder was to be applied to Father’s arrearage.4 The agreed order further provides that Father is to pay Mother $6,000 in attorney’s fees once the arrearage is paid in full.

In September and November, 1997, Father filed a motion asking the court to consider Social Security payments received directly by the children as child support and thus applicable to his arrearage. Father further sought credit for overpayments on his automobile insurance obligation, which insurance, according to Father, actually cost less than the $125 he paid per month. Mother did not file any pleadings in response to Father’s requests.

On March 20, 1998, a hearing was held on Father’s pending motions. During the course of argument, Father’s counsel at the time, Marty McDonald, advised the referee that the benefits Father was receiving had increased since the entry of the agreed order. He argued that Father’s Social Security income should be treated as gross income, that the VA income should be treated as net pay, and that Father’s ongoing child support obligation should be set at $1,016 per month. Wife’s counsel, on the other hand, argued that both the Social Security and VA payments should be treated as net income, resulting in a child support obligation of $1,049 per month. The referee asked the parties to consult with a certified public accountant on the taxability of Father’s Social Security payments. The attorneys were directed by the referee to submit the accountant’s opinion to him in writing .

The referee’s findings and recommendations were filed on June 15, 1998, nunc pro tunc March 20, 1998. The referee found that the Social Security payments received directly by the children, as well as the overpayment on the automobile insurance, should be credited against Father’s arrearage. The referee further found Father’s income to be $3,212 per month; however, no finding was made as to Father’s ongoing child support obligation.

2 The agreed order indicates that the arrearage was originally $16,000, consisting of $14,000 in unpaid general child support an d $2,00 0 in unpaid medical expenses of the children; however, on the day of the hearing, Father tendered a check to M other in the am ount of $2 ,000. Thus, the balance of the arre arage carried forward as of August 7, 1997, was $14,000.

3 It appears from later statements made by the parties’ counsel that at the time of the entry of the agreed order, Father was receiving only VA benefits. He began receiving Social Security benefits in September, 1997.

4 The record indicates that the parties’ oldest child had reached the age of majority by 1997. However, it appears from the statements of the parties’ counsel that the marital dissolution agreement required Father to pr ovide for the ir oldest child’s health and automobile insurance as well as her medical an d educa tional expen ses past the age of majority.

-2- On June 26, 1998, the referee’s findings and recommendations were confirmed by the trial court. Thereafter, on July 24, 1998, Mother filed a motion requesting the trial court “to clarify, modify, and or replace” the referee’s findings and recommendations. Specifically, Mother alleged that the referee had miscalculated Father’s income and that the findings and recommendations failed to address several issues, including an award of attorney’s fees “as was before the Court,” the present amount of child support to be paid, Father’s failure to pay outstanding medical bills, and the fact that the parties’ second child had recently begun driving and was now covered by the automobile insurance paid by Father. In this motion, Mother also sought an award of attorney’s fees incurred in filing the motion.

A hearing was held before the referee on March 24, 1999, on Mother’s motion. At this hearing, Mother argued that the referee’s order should be modified to include a finding of the amount of child support owed by Father based upon his increased income. Mother argued that the child support obligation should be set at $1,049 per month. Father, on the other hand, argued that his support obligation should be set at $927. After much discussion and calculations by the parties and the referee, the referee announced that the obligation should be set at $1,000 effective April 1, 1999. An order was entered on April 5, 1999, to that effect.

On October 6, 1999, the referee heard argument from the parties regarding the current balance of Father’s arrearage. In considering the issue of the arrearage, the parties focused upon the amount of child support owed from the March 20, 1998, hearing until April 1, 1999, the latter date being the effective date of the new child support obligation of $1,000. Mother contended that Father owed $1,049 per month for this time period, and her arrearage figures were calculated upon Father owing this amount for that period of time, despite an existing court order to the contrary. Father, who was represented by new counsel, argued that the child support obligation did not change as of the March 20, 1998, hearing, and that Father only owed $650 per month until April 1, 1999, when the obligation was increased to $1,000 per month. The ongoing child support obligation was also discussed, as the parties’ second child had reached the age of majority in August, 1999, leaving only one minor child. The referee set Father’s ongoing child support obligation, effective October 1, 1999, at $685. As to the other issues before the court, the referee instructed the parties to submit proposed findings and recommendations.

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Bluebook (online)
Patricia Sadler v. Lawrence Sadler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-sadler-v-lawrence-sadler-tennctapp-2001.