Rickner v. Frederick

590 N.W.2d 288, 459 Mich. 371
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1999
DocketDocket 111964
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 590 N.W.2d 288 (Rickner v. Frederick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rickner v. Frederick, 590 N.W.2d 288, 459 Mich. 371 (Mich. 1999).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

In these postdivorce proceedings, the circuit court denied a petition to reinstate alimony, ruling that it no longer had jurisdiction to grant the petition. The Court of Appeals affirmed. We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals, vacate the judgment of the circuit court, and remand this case to the circuit court for further proceedings.

I

The plaintiff and the defendant were married in 1966. In 1988, the plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce. By that time, the parties’ three children had reached the age of majority.

In early 1989, the circuit court entered an interim support order that required the defendant to pay $750 a month in temporary alimony.1 The judgment of divorce was entered in May 1989. It provided:

ALIMONY
It is further ordered and adjudged that said Plaintiff shall receive $750.00 per month by Defendant through the Jackson County Friend of the Court, until further Order of this Court or the death or remarriage of the Plaintiff, and said Friend of the Court is hereby directed to transmit all sums of money so paid to the said Plaintiff.
It is further ordered and adjudged that Alimony shall be automatically reviewed in two (2) years and will also be automatically reviewed at the time of the Defendant’s retirement period.

[373]*373The judgment also included this paragraph:

CONTINUING JURISDICTION PROVISION
It is further ordered and adjudged that this Court reserves jurisdiction of and over all of the subject matter in these proceedings and of each and all the parties to take such steps and proceedings as may be necessary or to the Court may seem proper and carry out all and singular the duties and obligations set forth herein.

In July 1990, the defendant filed a petition to terminate or modify the alimony.2 In his motion, the defendant said that the plaintiff was cohabiting with an unrelated member of the opposite sex. He further asserted a material change of circumstances — he was facing additional expenses related to a remarriage and a blended family that included five college-age children. He further recited that “changes in the business climate” meant that his $750 monthly alimony obligation represented half his net pay. In August 1990, the circuit court denied the defendant’s petition.

In conjunction with the two-year review specified in the judgment of divorce, the Friend of the Court prepared a detailed report in late 1991. Finding strengths and weaknesses in the positions of both parties, an FOC investigator recommended that the alimony be increased, but that “the Judgment of Divorce be modified so that alimony terminates in the event of plaintiff’s death, remarriage or in the event that she [374]*374resides with the member of the opposite sex without the benefit of marriage.” The circuit court agreed. In December 1991, it raised the alimony obligation to $945.70 per month and ordered:

The Judgment of Divorce is further modified to provide that the Defendant’s obligation to pay alimony shall terminate on the Plaintiffs death, remarriage or residence with a male person to whom she is not married or related.

It does not appear that a hearing was conducted with regard to these changes. There was no appeal of this order.

In mid-September 1992, an FOC referee examined this matter again. In handwritten findings, he described the situation in this manner:

Marriage of the Payee scheduled Sept. 22, 1992, to Charles Minix, Payee admitting cohabitation as of August 30, 1992, ostensibly for reasons of having to break a lease, the monthly income for this household based upon retirement benefits of the prospective husband being on the order of 1500.00 per month.

That day, the circuit court entered an order that included the handwritten phrase, “support being reserved pursuant [to] the prior order of the Court . . . .” Again, there was no appeal.

Late in October 1993, another referee concluded:

It appears that alimony was reserved as of 9/16/92, after it was determined that plaintiff was cohabitating with a member of the opposite sex. The foc is still charging alimony. The alimony charges are to be reserved as of the date of the applicable order (9/16/92), with accounting to adjust the balance accordingly. Accounting is further directed to transmit an audit and ledger to both parties after this adjustment [375]*375is made. Defendant is to make payments on any balance owed after the alimony arrearage is ascertained.

The circuit court’s October 1993 order directed that “all alimony charges that accrued after 9/16/92” were to be canceled.

In January 1994, on recommendation of the referee, the circuit court ordered that “[t]he file is to be closed.”

Nearly two years after the file was closed (and more than three years after alimony was stopped), the plaintiff filed a November 1995 petition to reinstate the alimony. She cited a “serious decline in her health,”3 which left her unable to work. With regard to her living arrangements, she said that she lived with Mr. Minix for less than a month, until just before the marriage that had been planned for September 1992. She acknowledged that she later lived for fourteen months with a man named Elster Ford, to whom she paid $200 a month “in addition to performing domestic work around the home.” Later, she “found a roommate named Mr. Bill Bailey and shared with him a two-bedroom apartment where each had their own bedroom” and “[t]hey split all expenses.” Because she was no longer cohabitating, she sought reinstatement of the alimony.

With regard to the authority of the court to enter such an order, the plaintiff cited MCR 2.612(C)(1)(f), which allows a court to grant relief from judgment for “[a]ny other reason justifying relief from the opera[376]*376tion of the judgment.” The plaintiff also cited MCL 552.28; MSA 25.106, which provides:4

On petition of either party, after a judgment for alimony or other allowance for either party or a child, or after a judgment for the appointment of trustees to receive and hold property for the use of either party or a child, and subject to [MCL 552.17; MSA 25.97], the court may revise and alter the judgment, respecting the amount or payment of the alimony or allowance, and also respecting the appropriation and payment of the principal and income of the property held in trust, and may make any judgment respecting any of the matters that the court might have made in the original action.

The circuit court heard the petition in December 1995, and denied relief:

The Court is satisfied that the statute in question and the Court Rule, Michigan Court Rule 2.612(C)(1)(f) do not apply to this case.
[Defense counsel’s] position is well taken by this Court, that there must come a time where these matters are over with. The alimony has been terminated. To think then that person could come in in five years, ten years, 20 years later and ask again that alimony be reinstated, the Court finds to be a situation that simply would never put matters to rest.

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Rickner v. Frederick
590 N.W.2d 288 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
590 N.W.2d 288, 459 Mich. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickner-v-frederick-mich-1999.