Schoenfeld v. Marsh

614 A.2d 733, 418 Pa. Super. 469, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3072
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 3, 1992
Docket1777
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 614 A.2d 733 (Schoenfeld v. Marsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoenfeld v. Marsh, 614 A.2d 733, 418 Pa. Super. 469, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3072 (Pa. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinions

KELLY, Judge:

In this Opinion we are called upon to determine whether the trial court properly modified a registered foreign order for child support and alimony, based on the foreign court’s reduction of the father’s support obligation, to a date occurring prior to the father’s Pennsylvania petition to modify the registered foreign order. We find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion. Therefore, we affirm.

The relevant facts and procedural history, succinctly stated by the trial court, are as follows:

[t]his support case originated in 1985 in West Virginia, the state of the parties’ last marital domicile. On February 23 of that year, Mother filed a complaint for divorce in the Circuit Court of Harrision County, West Virginia. Prior thereto, the parties had entered into a marital settlement agreement, pursuant to which Father agreed to pay $200 per month alimony to Mother and $1,000 per month child support for the parties’ two children, Amy (now age 11) and Beth (now age 8). (See January 22,1985 Agreement). This agreement was later incorporated into the final divorce decree entered by the West Virginia court on March 21, 1986.1
In July of 1987, Father filed a petition for modification, seeking termination of his alimony obligation and a reduction in his child support obligation. The basis of Father’s petition was his recent loss of employment with Georgia [472]*472Pacific Corporation, where he had been earning approximately $32,000 per year.
An initial hearing on Father’s petition was held before West Virginia Family Law Master Cornelia Reep on July 6, 1987. A second hearing was held on October 11, 1987, following which the Family Law Master recommended that Father’s petition be held in abeyance until certain financial information was provided to the court.... A third and final hearing on Father’s petition was held on December 10,1987. For reasons unknown to this court, [the Family Law Master] did hot issue her final recommendation on the merits of Father’s modification petition until ten months later, in September of 1988. By that time, Father apparently had moved to Pennsylvania and Mother had registered the divorce decree and the West Virginia support orders with Allegheny County Family Division for enforcement pursuant to the Revised Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act. By order dated July 18, 1988, Allegheny County court confirmed the West Virginia orders [of] 3-21-86; 5-19-87; 10-2-87, and calculated arrears owing under those orders at $12,975.00, as of June 2,1988. The Pennsylvania order also provided for wage attachment and contempt proceedings in the event Father failed to comply with this order.
On August 8, 1988, Father petitioned this court to stay enforcement of the Pennsylvania order until the West Virginia court had ruled on his modification petition, arguing that the modification, if granted by the West Virginia court, would substantially reduce the arrears enforceable under the Pennsylvania order. Father’s petition was denied. (August 11, 1988 Pennsylvania order).
Several months after registration of the West Virginia orders with this court, the West Virginia court finally rendered a decision on the merits of Father’s petition. By order dated December 16, 1988, the West Virginia court granted Father’s petition and terminated Father’s alimony obligation, retroactive to June 1988 (due to Mother’s May 1988 remarriage), and reduced Father’s monthly child sup[473]*473port obligation from $1,000.00 to $510.00, effective October 1, 1988. Arrears were reset at $7,000 as of December 3, 1988.
Almost one year later, on September 14, 1989, Father filed an appeal with the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals on the issue of retroactivity only. On appeal, Father argued that the child support reduction should have been made retroactive either to June 3, 1987 (date of filing petition) or to December 12, 1987 (date of final hearing on petition). Father’s appeal was pending for almost one year before the appellate court finally rendered a decision denying the appeal and confirming the effective date of the December 16, 1989 order as being October 1, 1988. (See July 16, 1990 appellate decision).
While Father’s appeal had been pending in West Virginia, the Pennsylvania order continued to run the same as it had since the registration of the original West Virginia support orders in July of 1988. When the West Virginia appellate court issued its decision, Father filed his petition with this court on August 29, 1990 to change the July 18, 1988 order consistent with the West Virginia appellate decision. This court granted Father’s petition by order dated October 17, 1990, which provides in relevant part:
AND NOW, this 17th day of October, 1990, upon consideration of defendant’s Petition to Modify Alimony and Support Obligation in Accordance with West Virginia State Supreme Court of Appeals ruling, the argument thereon, it appearing that the defendant has been under an order of the Circuit Court of Harrison County, West Virginia, dated March 21, 1986, to pay $1,000.00 per month in child support and $200.00 per month in alimony, such order being transferred to this court by this court’s order dated July 19, 1988, (which order included acceptance by the court of all arrearages due and owing at that time, plus a judgment entered by the West Virginia Court against defendant and in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $2,575.00 plus interest of 10% as of July 6,1987); and it appearing that on July 16, 1990, the Supreme Court of [474]*474Appeals of West Virginia at No. 19269, issued its opinion confirming the West Virginia Family Court Master’s finding that the defendant’s monthly child support obligation was to be reduced to the amount of $510.00 effective October 1, 1988, and it also appearing that plaintiff remarried in May, 1988, and therefore the alimony payments of $200.00 per month should have ceased as of June 1, 1988;
NOW, THEREFORE, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the current order for child support shall be modified to provide that defendant is to pay $510.00 per month, retroactive to October 1, 1988. Further, the order that defendant is to pay alimony of $200.00 is hereby suspended retroactive to June 1, 1988. The Wage Attachment is to be modified accordingly-
It is this order that forms the basis for Mother’s present appeal.

(Tr.Ct.Op. of 5/2/91 at 1-5).

The mother filed a motion for reconsideration. The trial court denied her motion, finding that 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 4352(e), prohibiting retroactive modification of arrears to a date prior to the date a petition for modification had been filed, did not bar the trial court’s actions in this case. It reasoned that the October 17, 1990 order granting the father’s petition to modify was “merely a nunc pro tunc order consistent with the December 1988 West Virginia order” aimed at recalculating the Pennsylvania court’s July, 1988 registration order to reflect the reduction warranted by the West Virginia order. (Tr.Ct.Op. of 5/2/91 at 6-7).

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Bluebook (online)
614 A.2d 733, 418 Pa. Super. 469, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoenfeld-v-marsh-pasuperct-1992.