Shelly R. Higgins v. Todd A. Wood

2018 ME 88, 189 A.3d 724
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 3, 2018
DocketDocket: Pen–17–170
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2018 ME 88 (Shelly R. Higgins v. Todd A. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelly R. Higgins v. Todd A. Wood, 2018 ME 88, 189 A.3d 724 (Me. 2018).

Opinions

Dissent: JABAR, J.

SAUFLEY, C.J.

[¶ 1] In this appeal, and a separate opinion issued today, see Dep't of Health & Human Servs. v. Fagone , 2018 ME 89 , --- A.3d ----, we clarify the circumstances in which a court order that anticipates a change in child support upon the occurrence of future events will be self-effectuating. In the matter before us, we conclude that the court's order requiring Todd A. Wood to pay a specific amount of child support to Shelly R. Higgins did not contain a self-effectuating provision that immediately reduced Wood's child support payments upon his oldest child reaching age eighteen. We also conclude that neither administrative collateral estoppel nor administrative equitable estoppel was properly raised and therefore those doctrines cannot provide a remedy to Wood. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment on Wood's post-divorce motions in which the District Court (Bangor, Lucy, J. ) ordered changes in Wood's child support effective only after Wood's service of the post-divorce motion to modify.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶ 2] The following facts are drawn from the procedural record and from the family law magistrate's ( Chandler, M. ) findings of fact, reached upon a stipulated documentary record and adopted by the District Court ( Lucy, J. ). See Dunwoody v. Dunwoody , 2017 ME 21 , ¶ 7, 155 A.3d 422 . Higgins and Wood were married in May 1997 and have three children who were born in 1991, 1998, and 2001.

[¶ 3] Higgins filed a complaint for divorce on March 20, 2007, and a family law magistrate ( Langner, M. ) entered a divorce judgment on June 14, 2007, that provided for Higgins to have primary residence and required Wood to pay child support of $297.15 per week for the three children, who were then ages fifteen, nine, and five. The child support worksheet attached to the judgment provided as follows with respect to the overall weekly support obligation of the parents:

Basic weekly support for all children up to 18 years (or up to 19 years if still in high school) ....
a Total number of children 3
b Number of children ages 0-11 2 multiplied by amount from table 102 X 2 = 204
c Number of children ages 12-17 1 multiplied by amount from table 126

The court added in the $35 cost of health insurance for the three children without apportioning it per child. The order made Wood responsible for ninety-one percent of the weekly support and credited him for paying the cost of health insurance, resulting in the $297 weekly support amount that was required by the judgment for support of the three children. The child support order stated:

The child support obligation shall continue for each child until that child reaches the age of 18; provided, however, that if the child has not graduated, withdrawn, or been expelled from secondary school as defined in Title 20-A, the child support shall continue until the child graduates or reaches the age of 19, whichever occurs first[.]

[¶ 4] In addition, the order stated, "Any party to this action may ask the court to review the amount of child support and if appropriate, to modify it in accordance with the state's child support guidelines. To start this process, a party must file with the court a Motion to Modify."

[¶ 5] To assure that Wood met his child support obligations, Higgins pursued support enforcement through the Department of Health and Human Services Division of Support Enforcement and Recovery, which withheld Wood's wages to provide Higgins with the ordered child support beginning in the middle of 2008. In 2009, the oldest child turned eighteen, having already graduated from high school. At about that time, Wood asked the Department to reduce his payments, though he did not move to modify the judgment in the District Court. 1 The Department made no adjustment at that time.

[¶ 6] Wood continued to pay child support in the amount ordered and took no further action until February 2015 when his telephone calls to the Department prompted the Regional Manager of the Department's Division of Support Enforcement and Recovery to send him a notice that the Department was adjusting the child support obligation down to $182 per week. The $182 amount was apparently intended to reflect a flat reduction of the basic weekly support by the $126 amount originally allocated to the oldest child in the 2007 child support worksheet, with the health insurance provisions remaining the same despite the termination of support for one child, and the support amounts for the other two children remaining unchanged despite the increases that should have occurred when each of the younger children reached age twelve. At the time of the February 2015 letter, the two younger children were ages seventeen and thirteen.

[¶ 7] Several months later, in July 2015, the Director of the Division informed Wood that the February decision was in error and that Wood needed to file, in court, a motion to modify the child support order to seek any reduction in the ordered support.

[¶ 8] On July 24, 2015, Wood filed two motions in the District Court-a motion to modify and a motion for determination of overpayment. He argued that he had overpaid by more than $35,000 over the course of six years because, after the oldest child turned eighteen, his child support obligation should have been reduced by $114 per week. Although the use of the summary judgment process in family law matters is not authorized, see M.R. Civ. P. 56(a), 2 Wood also moved for summary judgment on his post-judgment motions, submitting a statement of material facts and supporting evidence. In the motion for summary judgment, he raised issues of administrative collateral estoppel and equitable estoppel. The parties filed opposing and reply memoranda and statements of material facts.

[¶ 9] On March 21, 2016, the family law magistrate ( Chandler, M. ) held a hearing. 3 The parties informed the magistrate that they had agreed to a series of three child support orders to apply from the filing of Wood's motion, in July 2015, forward. The first of these orders imposed an obligation of $280.50 per week toward the support of the two youngest children through January 2016 when the middle child turned eighteen. The order explicitly provided that the support would decrease to $207.56 upon the youngest child becoming the only child for whom support was owed, and the final order required Wood to pay $187 per week beginning in August 2016 based on the Department's revised child support table. See 17 C.M.R.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 ME 88, 189 A.3d 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelly-r-higgins-v-todd-a-wood-me-2018.