Robert D. Evans v. Beverly B. Evans

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 2007
Docket2007-CP-00920-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Robert D. Evans v. Beverly B. Evans (Robert D. Evans v. Beverly B. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert D. Evans v. Beverly B. Evans, (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2007-CP-00920-SCT

ROBERT D. EVANS

v.

BEVERLY B. EVANS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/10/2007 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. BILLY G. BRIDGES COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WASHINGTON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ROBERT D. EVANS (PRO SE) ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: SUSAN CAROLE SMITH NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART - 11/20/2008 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WALLER, P.J., EASLEY AND GRAVES, JJ.

EASLEY, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Robert Evans (Evans) appeals a final judgment of the Washington County Chancery

Court denying his request for downward modification of his child-support obligation, and

then ordering that he pay seventy-five percent of the future college expenses for his youngest

child, Robert. Evans filed a counter-complaint to a claim filed by his former wife, Beverly

Evans (Beverly), in which she requested an increase in the monthly child-support obligation,

payment of all college expenses for their daughter Elizabeth, payment of back child support,

and attorneys’ fees from Evans. Evans sought modification based on a material change in circumstances due to Elizabeth’s upcoming emancipation, her enrollment in college, and the

fact that Robert stays at Evans’s home six months out of the year. Evans also requested that

Beverly be held in contempt for violating telephone privileges, and that she be held

responsible for Evans’s attorneys’ fees.

¶2. A trial was held on October 16, 2006, following which the chancellor denied both

parties’ requests for modification, including Beverly’s plea for back child support, as well

as Evans’s request that Beverly be held in contempt of court, and held that each party was

responsible for his and her own attorney costs. The chancellor ordered Evans to resume

paying Beverly the lump sum of $2,000 per month for child support in the manner set forth

in the decreed settlement. The chancellor ordered that Robert should be provided with an

automobile, and that both parties were to pay for Robert’s future college expenses. The

parties were ordered to share proportionately in all the expenses thereof; seventy-five percent

to be paid by Evans, and the remaining twenty-five percent by Beverly.

¶3. Following judgment, Evans moved the trial court to reconsider its prior decision

denying modification, and included a motion asking the court to clarify whether the parents

were to share in college and automobile expenses or only college expenses in general. The

chancery court granted the clarification request, and ruled that Evans and Beverly are to pay

for both children’s car expenses as well as college expenses, seventy-five percent/twenty-five

percent, respectively. The chancellor reaffirmed that neither party would be required to pay

for such expenses upon each child reaching emancipation. The chancellor denied Evans’s

motion to reconsider the modification request. Evans appeals to this Court.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

2 ¶4. The parties were granted a divorce on the grounds of irreconcilable differences by the

Chancery Court of Washington County in December 1998. The decree approved the parties’

incorporated marital settlement agreement as to child custody, support, and property division.

Accordingly, Evans agreed to pay to Beverly the sum of $2,000 per month for the support

and maintenance of their two minor children, Elizabeth and Robert, ages thirteen and seven,

respectively, at the time of the divorce. Out of this amount, Evans was to pay the monthly

note toward the mortgage on the marital home, approximately $550 per month, and Beverly

was to pay for each child’s private-school education, approximately $320 per child, each

month during the school year. The parties were to share joint physical and legal custody of

the children. The marital home would remain Beverly’s residence. Evans would continue

to cover the children under his medical insurance plan; he would also pay seventy-five

percent of any medical expenses not covered by insurance, with Beverly responsible for the

remaining twenty-five percent. Evans was to maintain not less than $300,000 in life

insurance, with the children as beneficiaries, with this obligation to terminate when the

children are emancipated or reach the age of twenty-one, whichever occurs first. Both Evans

and Beverly specifically released each other from any claim for alimony, either periodic or

lump-sum.

¶5. At trial, Beverly testified that, beginning on September 1, 2005, Evans unilaterally

decreased the amount of child support that he was paying each month. Beverly claimed that

Evans began paying only the house note (which had increased to $590 per month) and

Robert’s private-school tuition (approximately $322 per month), thereby shorting her

approximately $1,088 per month.

3 ¶6. Evans disputed Beverly’s claim, but did not deny reducing his monthly support

payments. Evans claimed that he did so due to Elizabeth’s enrollment in college and need

of extra support, and because Beverly was no longer in need of money for Elizabeth’s

private-school tuition. Evans submitted evidence showing that from September 1, 2005, until

November 2006, the time of trial, he had paid $30,100 in child support, averaging $2,150 per

month. Evans also testified that he had been paying an additional sum of $200 a month

toward Elizabeth’s car, and approximately $80 a month in car insurance.

¶7. The chancellor found that Evans, without permission from the court, had unilaterally

modified the original settlement agreement. Evans was ordered to resume paying Beverly

$2,000 per month in child support in the manner set forth in the decreed settlement, and to

continue the payments until the emancipation of the youngest child, Robert. The chancellor

also determined that, because Evans had provided funds in excess of the support required of

him for both children throughout, he did not owe back child support.

¶8. The chancellor ruled that Elizabeth’s enrollment in college constituted a material

change in circumstances, finding for both parties on this ground; but he declined to modify

the $2,000 support obligation for either party. The chancellor also found that Beverly’s

income had increased since the time of the divorce decree, but that Evans’s had not. The

chancellor therefore ordered Beverly to begin assisting Evans with both Elizabeth’s college

expenses and her car expenses, in the proportional share of twenty-five percent.1 Finally, the

1 Evans and Beverly filed a joint tax return in 1998; Evans reported $60,493 as his adjusted gross income, Beverly reported $8,252. In 2005, Beverly reported $30,540 as her adjusted gross income. Evans testified at trial that his income for 2005 had not increased above that reported in 1995, though he stipulated that his income was intermingled with his new wife Susan’s income. Evans and Susan filed a joint return in 2005, with a reported

4 trial court ruled that both parties were to share Robert’s future college and automobile

expenses, in the same seventy-five/twenty-five proportional amount.2

DISCUSSION

¶9. Domestic-relations matters are reviewed under the limited substantial-

evidence/manifest-error rule. Giannaris v. Giannaris, 960 So. 2d 462, 467 (Miss. 2007)

(citing R.K. v. J.K., 946 So. 2d 764, 772 (Miss. 2007); Mizell v.

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