Scungio v. Scungio

2012 OK 90, 291 P.3d 616, 2012 Okla. LEXIS 92, 2012 WL 5328629
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 30, 2012
DocketNo. 110,251
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2012 OK 90 (Scungio v. Scungio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scungio v. Scungio, 2012 OK 90, 291 P.3d 616, 2012 Okla. LEXIS 92, 2012 WL 5328629 (Okla. 2012).

Opinion

COLBERT, V.C.J.

T 1 This Court granted certiorari review of a certified interlocutory order to address two issues which concern modification of child support: (1) Was a motion to modify properly before the district court for its determination? (2) Do the four corners of the divorcee decree in this matter demonstrate the parties' intent to be free of the statutory provisions concerning modification of child support? This Court holds the procedural vehicle utilized to place the motion to modify child support before the district court was authorized by statute. Additionally, the parties clearly demonstrated their intent that there be no modification of child support without their mutual assent and it was error for the district court to hold to the contrary.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

T2 In September, 2001, Mark Anthony Seungio (Father) and Margaret Sue Seungio (Mother) adopted their three foster children, siblings, two of whom were special needs children with serious psychological disabilities. In July, 2004, in contemplation of divoree, the parties entered into a written agreement titled "Contractual Agreement, Separation and Parenting Plan to be incorporated into divorcee decree." A divorce action was filed in 2007 and the document was incorporated into the divorce decree in October, 2009. Under the Agreement, Mother became the custodial parent and Father assumed support obligations.

T3 The Agreement and the divorce decree recited facts that are key to understanding the parties' intent concerning child support at the time of contracting. The parties were married in California in 1988 and have resided in Oklahoma since 1991. In the 2004 Agreement, Father admitted he committed "emotional abuse to his wife and children such that irreconcilable differences have arisen between the parties in consequence of which the parties are now living separate and apart." Concerning child support, the Agreement provided: "Husband agrees that his emotional abuse toward Wife and children exacerbated the any [sic] mental illnesses preexisting in the children and as such he has an even greater responsibility to support them." The Agreement also acknowledged that each parent:

agrees that he or she understands that due to the psychiatric disabilities of [two of the children], their disabilities may continue into adulthood, and that either or both may require substantial care and personal supervision and may not be capable of self-support and that under [the applicable Oklahoma Statutes] it is the parent's duty to maintain such person. If such is the case, the Mother agrees to provide the continued care beyond the age of majority and the Father agrees to provide continued child support as established above.

The Agreement set a formula for the calculation and payment of child support which provided:

Husband agrees to pay Wife, as child support, an amount that when added to the support alimony ... of $615.00 per month equals one half his military base pay (gross) or an amount equal to one half his highest base pay (gross) minus $615.00 in the event he leaves the military or retires in the form of child support with increases cost of living (COLA) adjustments, raises, and grade increases.
Child support will be payable on the first of each month in the form of an allotment into Wife's checking account and will be payable upon the signing of this Contractual Agreement in the amount of $1085.00 (2004 E-7 pay at 18 years in service) per month and will continue to be paid by the first of each month until all three children reach the age of majority and becomes [sie] self-supporting or 22 if attending college.

Thus, the Agreement provided terms and a formula that provided for more than what was required by the guidelines set out in the Oklahoma Statutes in order to meet the spe[619]*619cial needs of two of their children.1

{4 Father's child support payments were in significant arrearage at the time of divoree and have remained so. Before the divorce trial in October, 2009, Father retired from the United States Air Force and child support was calculated using the formula set out in the Agreement. A divorce was pronounced from the bench at trial. In December, 2009, the DHS filed a "Notice of Necessary Party" in the divorcee action which outlined the services that the DHS was providing for the minor children and notifying the District Court that it was a necessary party concerning "child support, medical support, and any debt due the State of Oklahoma." At the same time, the DHS filed a "Notice of Redirection of Support Payments" directing such payments to the Oklahoma Centralized Support Registry. The decree which incorporated the Agreement was signed and filed on March 30, 2010.

T5 On May 12, 2010, the Office of Administrative Hearings: Child Support Department of Human Services issued a "Notice to Review and Modify Support Order." The DHS asserted that the child support award was not in accord with the child support guidelines and that a change in Father's income required a reduction in the amount of his child support. A hearing was held before an administrative law judge on October 28, 2010, and an administrative "Court Minute" was issued which provided:

Now on this 28th day of October, 2010, Petitioner appears in person, pro se Respondent appears in person and with counsel, Floyd Taylor. State appears thru counsel, Kelli S. Price. After review of the pleadings and issues in this matter this court determines as follows: In the interest of judicial economy and in order to resolve all issues herein this matter shall be and is hereby transferred to the Oklahoma County District Court. The State shall set a MTDA & set this matter for hearing and the parties shall be notified by regular mail. All parties are ordered to appear for further hearings in this matter.

On November 10, 2010, an administrative law judge ordered the matter transferred to the District Court of Oklahoma County.

T 6 On December 30, 2010, The DHS filed in the divorce action a "Request to Docket Administrative Order" on behalf of "Plaintiff" in order to enforce the October 28, 2010, administrative minute order. In addition it filed a "Motion to Determine Arrearage" in the divorce action asking the court to settle "a dispute as to the arrearage owed" and set a judgment payment. The DHS did not file a motion to modify Father's child support in the divorce action apparently taking the position that a new motion was unnecessary.

T7 On July 18, 2011, Mother moved to dismiss the DHS motion to modify child sup[620]*620port which had been filed in the administrative action. She relied on this Court's decision in Parham v. Parham, 2010 OK 24, 236 P.3d 74, and argued the Agreement clearly expressed an intent that child support not be subject to the statutory requirement of modification in the event of a change in Father's income. Additionally, Mother argued that the procedure by which the administrative law judge "transferred" the matter to the district court was not authorized by statute.

1 8 The trial court denied Mother's motion to dismiss the request for modification of child support without addressing the procedural issue and holding that Mother "failed to demonstrate an intention by the parties to the Separation Agreement not to be subject to the statutory conditions for modification of child support." The trial court set the motion to modify child support for an evidentia-ry hearing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 OK 90, 291 P.3d 616, 2012 Okla. LEXIS 92, 2012 WL 5328629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scungio-v-scungio-okla-2012.