Scott H Finch v. Holly J Rudolph

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 2019
Docket344515
StatusUnpublished

This text of Scott H Finch v. Holly J Rudolph (Scott H Finch v. Holly J Rudolph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott H Finch v. Holly J Rudolph, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

SCOTT H. FINCH, UNPUBLISHED May 28, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 344515 Grand Traverse Circuit Court HOLLY J. RUDOLPH, formerly known as LC No. 2005-003273-UF HOLLY J. FINCH,

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and BORRELLO and BECKERING, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

This child-support dispute arises from plaintiff-father’s agreement to pay for the children’s non-insured health care expenses and to “use his best abilities” to pay for the children’s college education. Those obligations were incorporated into a consent divorce judgment and a shared parenting decree issued by an Ohio state court in 2004. In 2018, defendant-mother filed motions in Grand Traverse Family Court (the circuit court) to enforce the shared parenting decree. The circuit court denied the motions, ruling that it lacked subject- matter jurisdiction to enforce the pertinent provisions of the shared parenting decree. Defendant appeals by leave granted.1

Defendant argues that the circuit court had jurisdiction to enforce the shared parenting decree per a 2008 order from the Ohio court transferring this case to Michigan. However, for the reasons discussed below, the 2008 order did not transfer jurisdiction over the shared parenting decree provisions that defendant seeks to enforce in this case. After review, we conclude that defendant must seek enforcement of plaintiff’s obligations in accordance with the uniform acts that govern enforcement of out-of-state support orders and judgments. Because defendant did not seek enforcement under those acts, we affirm the trial court’s decision to deny the motions to

1 Finch v Rudolph, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, issued October 25, 2018 (Docket No. 344515).

-1- enforce. Our decision is without prejudice to any enforcement action brought following registration of the judgment in Michigan.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The parties married in Michigan in 1992 and divorced in Ohio in July 2004. The marriage produced two children. The children were elementary school age at the time of the divorce; they are now college-aged adults.

During the divorce proceedings, the parties’ respective counsel jointly presented a shared parenting plan to the Ohio court for approval. The Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County (the Ohio court) found that the plan was in the children’s best interest, and incorporated the plan into the court’s shared parenting decree issued in 2004. 2 The shared parenting plan was also incorporated in the parties’ separation agreement, which in turn was incorporated in the consent judgment of divorce.

The shared parenting plan required plaintiff to pay child support for each child until he or she reached age 19. The plan also required plaintiff to retain health insurance for the children until they reached age 19. According to the plan, defendant-mother was to pay the first $100 in the children’s annual health expenses not covered by insurance, and plaintiff was to pay the remainder of those annual expenses until the children reached age 19. Regarding college expenses, plaintiff was required to “use his best abilities to provide an undergraduate college education for the parties’ two children,” subject to some limitations.

The parties were awarded joint legal custody, i.e., “shared parenting,” and the children lived primarily with defendant, i.e., “the residential parent.” At the time the parties divorced, plaintiff lived in Ohio and defendant lived in Michigan.

In September 2005, defendant filed a petition in the circuit court to “transfer” jurisdiction over this case from Ohio and establish Grand Traverse County as the most convenient forum given the parties’ present residences: defendant was living in Grand Traverse County, and plaintiff was by then living in Milton, Michigan. Defendant alleged that there were property- settlement-enforcement issues and parenting-time issues. The circuit court granted defendant’s petition and accepted jurisdiction over the case.

2 In Ohio, a shared parenting plan “includes provisions relevant to the care of a child, such as the child’s living arrangements, medical care, and school placement.” Sayre v Furgeson, 2016- Ohio-3500; 66 NE3d 332, 340 (Ohio App, 2016). A shared parenting plan can be included in a shared parenting decree, which is a court order that “grants the parents shared parenting of a child.” Id.

-2- However, plaintiff contested the transfer of jurisdiction in the Ohio court. Ultimately, in September 2008 the Ohio court granted the transfer for “all . . . issues related to child custody, visitation and shared parenting, with the exception of child support . . . .”3 The Ohio court determined that Ohio law required it to maintain jurisdiction over child-support issues because the parties had not consented to the transfer.

Beginning in 2010, the circuit court heard and decided matters relating to the children’s health care. In October 2010, the circuit court denied defendant’s request for reimbursement of health care expenses, reasoning that Ohio retained jurisdiction over child-support issues and that reimbursement for medical expenses was one of those issues. However, in February 2014, the circuit court, with a different judge now presiding, ordered plaintiff to pay for the children’s accrued health care expenses including the cost of current and future counseling.

In July 2017, when the children were ages 20 and 17, defendant filed motions in the circuit court to enforce the shared parenting decree provisions regarding health care and college expenses. Defendant averred that plaintiff was not contributing to the cost of the son’s college education and that plaintiff had liquidated the investment accounts intended to be used for the children’s college education. With respect to medical expenses, defendant averred that plaintiff refused to pay expenses per the February 2014 order and owed $2,668.62 in outstanding non- insured health care expenses.

Plaintiff, then residing in Texas, responded with a summary-disposition motion seeking dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Plaintiff argued that the Ohio court retained jurisdiction over child-support issues and therefore the circuit court lacked jurisdiction over defendant’s request for reimbursement of health care expenses. As for college expenses, plaintiff argued that this was not one of the matters over which the Ohio court transferred jurisdiction.

In February 2018, while the parties’ motions were pending in the circuit court, plaintiff filed a motion in the Ohio court seeking modification of the shared parenting decree, including elimination of his obligations to pay non-insured health care expenses and assist with the children’s college expenses. In April 2018, the Ohio court denied plaintiff’s motion to modify. As to college expenses, the court reasoned that this obligation did not constitute child support and was therefore non-modifiable under Ohio law. With respect to plaintiff’s obligation to pay non-insured health care expenses, the court denied the motion because those expenses were in the nature of child support and enforceable as a part of the parties’ separation agreement. However, the Ohio court also determined that it no longer had “continuing exclusive jurisdiction” to modify child support. The court noted that it had previously retained jurisdiction over child-support related matters, but explained that “the Ohio [Uniform Interstate Family Support Act] has since been amended” effective January 1, 2016. Under the revised act, the court determined that it no longer had jurisdiction to modify the parties’ child-support obligations.

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Bluebook (online)
Scott H Finch v. Holly J Rudolph, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-h-finch-v-holly-j-rudolph-michctapp-2019.