Ross v. Ross

592 P.2d 600, 1979 Utah LEXIS 824
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1979
Docket15800, 15830
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 592 P.2d 600 (Ross v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Ross, 592 P.2d 600, 1979 Utah LEXIS 824 (Utah 1979).

Opinion

WILKINS, Justice:

Plaintiff brought this action to modify a California divorce decree, which we recognize he could properly do, 1 and defendant counterclaimed for accrued but unpaid alimony and child support. The Utah State Department of Social Services, through the Bureau of Recovery Services (herein “Recovery Services”) intervened seeking reim-bursemént from plaintiff for assistance payments made to defendant from October, 1972 to August, 1973.

Plaintiff appeals from that part of the District Court’s judgment awarding $24,457 to defendant, and $1,544 to the State of Utah. On cross-appeal, defendant seeks a reversal of that part of the Court’s judgment granting plaintiff credit of $5,000 against accrued and unpaid alimony. No appeal is taken from the District Court’s modification of the California divorce decree in favor of plaintiff. 2

Plaintiff and defendant were divorced in California in 1971. At a divorce hearing held February 19, 1971, plaintiff was ordered to pay to defendant alimony in the amount of $150 per month and child support in the amount of $100 per month for each of the three minor children who were issue of the marriage.

The day following the divorce hearing, plaintiff left the State of California and went to Dallas, Texas, where he lived under an assumed name. Plaintiff admitted that his purpose in doing so was to avoid his child support and alimony obligations. Defendant contacted the district attorney in San Mateo, California, for help in locating plaintiff, but the district attorney was unsuccessful. Defendant resided in California until August, 1972, at which time she moved to Utah. Here she applied for and *602 received state assistance, and assigned her right of child support and alimony to the State of Utah to the extent of the assistance received by her.

Plaintiff contacted defendant by telephone in October, 1972, but told defendant he was in Colorado, rather than Texas. At this time, Recovery Services began to search for plaintiff but did not locate him until September, 1973.

In February, 1973, plaintiff came to Salt Lake City, and spent a week in a motel while he visited his children. He contacted defendant by telephone from time to time after this, and began sending her occasional checks of $20 or $25, until Recovery Services located him in September, 1973. He then began to send $225 each month, which Recovery Services turned over to defendant. Defendant received no further state assistance after that time.

The parties attempted a reconciliation in 1976. In February of that year, plaintiff moved to Salt Lake City and into the home of defendant’s parents, where defendant and the children were living. Defendant had been paying her parents $200 per month as a contribution toward the family’s expenses and continued to do so. Plaintiff produced four checks of $100 each which he paid to defendant’s parents in addition to the amounts paid by defendant. During this period of time, defendant was working and apparently allowed her funds to be commingled with plaintiff’s. In September, 1976, the parties purchased a home and took title in their names, as husband" and wife, and as joint tenants. A down payment of $5,000 was paid, mostly out of the plaintiff’s funds but the evidence is conflicting as to the amount each party paid. 3 Plaintiff moved out of the house in December, 1976, and defendant and the children continued living there. Plaintiff continued to pay the mortgage payments until November or December, 1977, at which time he brought this action. Plaintiff claims the mortgage payments as payments of child support, while claiming ownership of the house.

Plaintiff contends that defendant, or Recovery Services on her behalf, waived accrued alimony and child support payments, and that plaintiff is therefore estopped to claim the unpaid amounts. Secondly, plaintiff contends that he paid not $7,024 (as noted infra) but $28,000 toward the support of plaintiff and the children for which he should have credit against the arrearages.

The Court found that neither defendant nor anyone acting on her behalf ever represented to plaintiff that alimony and child support payments could be paid in any way except by direct payment to defendant or a government agency to be transferred to defendant, nor had defendant or anyone acting on her behalf ever represented to plaintiff that accrued support payments would be forgiven or in any way compromised. The Court further found that plaintiff had paid only $7,024 as child support .under the decree, and that defendant had received $1,544 in unreimbursed assistance from the State of Utah from approximately December, 1972 through October, 1973.

This being an equitable proceeding, 4 it is the prerogative of this Court to review the facts as well as the law, 5 but we do not overturn the District Court’s findings unless the evidence clearly preponderates against them. 6

In order to prevail on his theory of estop-pel, plaintiff must prove that defendant, by her representations or actions led plaintiff to believe he need not pay alimony or child support, and that plaintiff, in reliance on said representations, changed his position to *603 his detriment. 7 In such a case, enforcement of the decree creates a hardship and injustice to plaintiff, and defendant would be estopped to deny her own misrepresentations, and estopped from claiming unpaid support.

But plaintiff did not present any evidence that defendant agreed to waive unpaid alimony and child support payments or to reduce such payments. He testified that the parties never had any conversations concerning the subject except in a “general way.” He did testify that defendant promised that she would not have him arrested if he came to Salt'Lake City to see the children, 8 in 1972, and had said she did not want to “hassle” him; that she only wanted him to take care of the children. That was the extent of plaintiff’s evidence to support an equitable estoppel. Plaintiff also contends that Recovery Services compromised defendant’s claims. Plaintiff’s testimony concerning his alleged conversations with Recovery Services are equally as tenuous as the rest of his testimony, and does not show any basis to support this proposition. Nor does a letter from Recovery Services to him show any such compromise.

We find no evidence that defendant or Recovery Services made implicit or explicit statements on which plaintiff could reasonably rely to the effect that accrued but unpaid support payments were waived. Nor was plaintiff misled by defendant’s conduct in attempting a reconciliation. Plaintiff testified that he moved to Utah to be with his children, and moved in with defendant because he had no place else to go. He testified that they did not plan to remarry. And he did not testify that he moved to Utah relying on any promise made by defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
592 P.2d 600, 1979 Utah LEXIS 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-ross-utah-1979.