Richard P. Davis v. Dawn M. Davis

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 12, 2024
Docket2023-2506
StatusPublished

This text of Richard P. Davis v. Dawn M. Davis (Richard P. Davis v. Dawn M. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard P. Davis v. Dawn M. Davis, (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA __________________________________

Case No. 5D2023-2506 LT Case No. 2008-DR-2421 __________________________________

RICHARD DAVIS,

Appellant,

v.

DAWN DAVIS,

Appellee. _______________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Hernando County. Don Barbee, Jr., Judge.

Allison M. Perry, of Florida Appeals, P.A., Tampa, and John E. Napolitano, of Lucas, Macyszyn & Dyer, Spring Hill, for Appellant.

Kimberly A. Scarano, of Jeffery P. Cario, P.A., Brooksville, for Appellee.

July 12, 2024

BOATWRIGHT, J.

Appellant, Richard P. Davis (“Former Husband”), appeals the lower court’s order finding him in contempt of a final judgment of dissolution of marriage which adopted the marital settlement agreement into which he and Appellee, Dawn M. Davis (“Former Wife”), had entered in 2008. The appeal centers on the lower court’s finding that Former Husband was obligated under the terms of the marital settlement agreement to pay half of the children’s college tuition and expenses. Former Husband argues that the court erred when it: 1) interpreted the marital settlement agreement to provide that he had contractually agreed to pay half of his children’s college tuition and expenses; 2) found him in contempt for failing to pay the college tuition and expenses, as a contractual obligation to pay college expenses for adult children cannot be enforced via contempt; and 3) determined there was no need to make a finding regarding Former Husband’s ability to pay before it ruled him to be in contempt. We reverse on the basis that the court erred in construing the marital settlement agreement to require Former Husband to pay half of the children’s college tuition and expenses; and because this issue is dispositive, we do not reach the remaining two issues on appeal. 1

I.

Former Husband and Former Wife got divorced in December of 2008. They both represented themselves throughout the entirety of the divorce proceedings. At the time of the divorce, they had two minor children, “A.P.D.” and “I.Z.D.,” who were born in 2002 and 2003, respectively. The final judgment of dissolution of marriage incorporated a marital settlement agreement that the parties had jointly drafted. Particular to this appeal, section 10 of the marital settlement agreement is entitled “Secondary School Expenses.” The provision reads as follows:

The parties agree that the Husband will be responsible, above and beyond the standard monthly child support, for 50% of any secondary educational tuition and/or related expenses for all of the children.

1 Although we do not reach the contempt issue on appeal, we note that a contractual duty to pay a child’s college tuition and expenses cannot be enforced by contempt. See Southard v. Southard, 756 So. 2d 251, 253 (Fla. 5th DCA 2000).

2 Should one of the children not attend a secondary educational institution prior to the age of twenty-one (21), the Husband is relieved of this financial responsibility for that child.

The case was dormant until March of 2023, when Former Wife filed a “Verified Motion for Contempt and Enforcement of Final Judgment” (the “contempt motion”) against Former Husband, alleging that he had failed to comply with section 10 of the marital settlement agreement by refusing to provide any reimbursement for the eldest child’s (A.P.D.) college tuition and expenses.

In the contempt motion, Former Wife alleged that A.P.D. had graduated from high school in 2020 at the age of 18 and had since been continuously enrolled in college full-time. As of the date the motion for contempt was filed, A.P.D. had incurred tuition costs and related expenses cumulatively totaling $21,212.77. Former Wife alleged that she had notified Former Husband of his obligation to provide reimbursement for half of A.P.D.’s college expenses under section 10 of the marital settlement agreement and that he had refused to provide her with any reimbursement. Former Husband responded with an answer, a motion for summary judgment, and a motion to dismiss the contempt motion. Former Husband’s primary argument in said motions was that section 10 of the marital settlement agreement did not require him to pay half of A.P.D.’s college expenses because college is “postsecondary education,” as opposed to “secondary education,” which is the term used in the provision. He asserted that he was thus only responsible for half of any tuition and associated costs for “secondary education,” which under its ordinary meaning constituted “a school intermediate between elementary school and college and usually offering general, technical, vocational, or college-preparatory courses.”

A hearing was held on the contempt motion. Both parties were represented by counsel as they now are on appeal. The court agreed that the term “secondary education” did not mean college. The court referenced that the term meant high school. However, the court stated that when taken together with the second part of the provision at issue, the term “secondary education” did not

3 make any sense. In this regard, the court stated: “[T]he second paragraph . . . makes the first paragraph not make any sense if we’re talking about high school. Because people don’t elect to go to high school between the ages of 18 and 21 and incur tuition and fees.” As such, the court found that the provision was ambiguous and decided to allow the submission of parol evidence, over Former Husband’s objection, to ascertain the intent of the parties.

Former Wife then testified that both she and Former Husband had been unrepresented during the course of the initial dissolution proceedings, and that they ultimately drafted the marital settlement agreement by mutual agreement via an online document assistant service called “3StepDivorce.com.” Her account of section 10 of the marital settlement agreement was that the provision was added because Former Husband was not able to pay his full child support obligation. She testified she agreed to a reduced child support amount in exchange for his agreement to pay for “half of college for each of the children,” and section 10 of the marital settlement agreement was drafted to embody this agreement. Former Husband, however, testified that he and Former Wife never discussed college expenses when they were drafting the marital settlement agreement.

The court issued a written order finding that the disputed provision applied to college and not secondary school. The court found that the language of the provision at issue was ambiguous. In so ruling, the court relied on Former Wife’s testimony, as the court found her to be more credible than Former Husband, to find that the parties had intended the provision to apply to college tuition and expenses. The court stated: “It would be an illogical reading of the entirety of paragraph 10 for the parties to have intended the [Former Husband] to pay 50% of high school costs unless one of the children decided not to attend prior to the age of 21.” The court further explained: “That essentially means that the child could decide at 13 or 14 years old to quit high school and go another direction in life. Courts may not interpret contracts to reach absurd results.”

As a result of the court’s interpretation of the provision, the court denied Former Husband’s motion to dismiss and motion for summary judgment. The court held Former Husband in contempt

4 for violating the parties’ final judgment of dissolution of marriage because of his failure to reimburse his portion of A.P.D.’s college expenses under section 10 of the marital settlement agreement and ordered him to pay his half of the college tuition and expenses and attorney’s fees to Former Wife.

II.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Richard P. Davis v. Dawn M. Davis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-p-davis-v-dawn-m-davis-fladistctapp-2024.