Shaw v. Cameron

481 S.E.2d 365, 125 N.C. App. 522, 1997 N.C. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 4, 1997
DocketCOA95-341
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 481 S.E.2d 365 (Shaw v. Cameron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Cameron, 481 S.E.2d 365, 125 N.C. App. 522, 1997 N.C. App. LEXIS 111 (N.C. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

JOHN, Judge.

Plaintiff assigns error to the trial court’s 11 July 1994 order restricting discovery and to the court’s 24 October 1994 judgment limiting child support paid by defendant to that amount computed utilizing the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines (the Guidelines). We hold the trial court erred in its 11 July 1994 discovery order.

Pertinent factual and procedural background is as follows: plaintiff and defendant lived together at defendant’s home in Wilmington from October 1992 until late January or early February 1993; however, they never married. The parties’ son, Riley Jackson Cameron (Riley), was born 11 September 1993.

Plaintiff instituted suit for child support 6 October 1993 and defendant answered, denying paternity. Plaintiff’s subsequent motion *524 to amend her complaint to include a claim for custody was granted by the trial court. In December 1993, following receipt of blood-grouping test results establishing defendant’s paternity of Riley, the parties entered into a consent agreement requiring defendant to pay child support in the amount of $600 per month pending a support award by the court.

Plaintiff submitted a “First Set of Interrogatories to Defendant” and “First Request to Defendant for Production of Documents,” and received responses containing objections to much of the information sought. Plaintiff thereupon filed a motion to compel 8 June 1994. Defendant countered by seeking a protective order regarding certain financial matters and filing a stipulation that he would “not raise ‘inability to pay reasonable child support’ as a defense.” In an order filed 11 July 1994, the trial court allowed plaintiff’s motion to compel in part, but strictly limited the scope of discoverable information.

At trial in October 1994, evidence was introduced tending to show plaintiff was thirty-seven years-old, had obtained her GED and worked in the past as a nightclub dancer, but that she had not been employed for several years prior to trial. She lived in a mobile home in Davie County with one year-old Riley and three year-old Robbie, her son from a previous relationship. Plaintiff received income in the form of AFDC, food stamps, HUD rent subsidies, and occasional child support from Robbie’s father.

The evidence also tended to show that defendant, thirty-eight years old at the time of trial, had obtained a tenth-grade education. He had not been employed since at least 1988, save for part-time work as a musician in a band for which he received approximately $500 annually. All defendant’s living expenses were paid from proceeds of the Bruce B. Cameron, III, trust (the trust) established for defendant’s benefit by his father. Defendant received an allowance of $300 per week from the trust, but sometime prior to October 1994 had received $650 per week. The 1994 proceeds of the trust, including interest and stock dividends totalling $29,294.54 through September 1994 and “non-recurring distributions from limited partnerships” in the amount of $38,251.72, were projected to total $67,546.

Testimony by the accountant employed by defendant’s father indicated she was responsible for management of the trust records. All defendant’s bills were directed to her for payment at the office of defendant’s father, including defendant’s monthly medical insurance premiums in the amount of $436.71, child support of $600.00 per *525 month for defendant’s son by his first marriage, and $65.00 per week in preschool expenses for defendant’s daughter living in the Wilmington home. The accountant testified defendant was possessed of no authority to direct payment of monies from the trust account nor to render decisions concerning assets of the trust. Moreover, the amount of defendant’s allowance from the trust was determined by defendant’s father and defendant had no control over that decision.

Further testimony showed defendant owned a five bedroom home which his father had purchased for him while retaining a promissory note in the amount of $150,006.50 executed by defendant. Although the note specified 3 September 1995 as the date upon which it was due and payable, defendant stated that he “[didn’t] think there [was] a specific date on it.” A full-time housekeeper employed by defendant discharged duties including cooking, cleaning, and helping care for defendant’s three year-old daughter by his second wife, from whom he was separated. The housekeeper, who earned $15,472 between January and September 1994, was paid from the trust.

The court entered judgment 24 October 1994 granting plaintiff primary custody, but denying plaintiff’s request for an upward deviation from the Guidelines and defendant’s request for a deviation reducing the Guideline amount. Plaintiff consequently was awarded child support in the amount of $644 per month, which amount was calculated using defendant’s 1994 projected trust income as his gross income. Plaintiff was also granted $1,500 in counsel fees. She filed notice of appeal 9 November 1994.

Plaintiff first contends the trial court erred in its 11 July 1994 order addressing her motion to compel discovery. Specifically, plaintiff challenges those portions of the court’s order directing that defendant respond to discovery requests “only as to property owned individually by the Defendant and subject to his exclusive control” and limiting defendant’s responses regarding his inheritance or trust interests to those items “subject to his exclusive ownership and control.”

To cite one example, plaintiff served the following interrogatory on defendant:

Do you have, or have you had in the last 18 months, an ownership or beneficial interest in any entity, including but not limited to partnerships, limited partnerships, corporations, associations, joint ventures, trusts and sole proprietorships? If so, describe *526 each such entity with particularity, including but not limited to its name; its address; your legal or equitable relationship to or interest in the entity; the fair market value of your interest in the entity; and your 1993 income, from the entity.

In consequence of the court’s restrictions, defendant’s answer to this interrogatory and others similar in nature was “none,” notwithstanding data on his 1993 tax returns reflecting an interest in at least two partnerships, Cameron Co. Ltd. Partnership and Cameron Properties, and one closely held corporation, Bayshore Estates. The sole information concerning defendant’s assets and income obtainable by plaintiff within the limitations set by the court was that contained in defendant’s 1992 and 1993 income tax returns.

As a result of the court’s order, plaintiff asserts, she was

denied any reasonable opportunity to gather evidence as to the defendant’s non-taxable income, as to the nature and value of the defendant’s interest in the partnerships, as to the identity and value of the defendant’s interest in real estate that he did not solely own, as to the terms of the trust generating the $67,546 income in 1994, and as to the nature and extent of tax-sheltered investments not solely owned and controlled by the defendant.

Generally, “orders regarding matters of discovery are within the discretion of the trial court and will not be upset on appeal absent a showing of abuse of discretion.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
481 S.E.2d 365, 125 N.C. App. 522, 1997 N.C. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-cameron-ncctapp-1997.