Shrivastava v. Mates

612 A.2d 313, 93 Md. App. 320, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 8, 1992
Docket1796, September Term, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 612 A.2d 313 (Shrivastava v. Mates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shrivastava v. Mates, 612 A.2d 313, 93 Md. App. 320, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 232 (Md. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

HARRELL, Judge.

Appellant, Lorely Shrivastava, challenges the 16 July 1991 order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County denying her motion to modify child support. The principal question raised by this appeal is whether a binding agreement for child support between the parties is, in and of itself, a sufficient reason for deviation from the child support guidelines, codified as Md.Fam.Law Code Ann. § 12-201, et seq. (1991 Repl.Vol.). For reasons we shall explain, *323 we answer this question in the negative. We also reject appellee’s, Amnon Mates’, contention that the fact that such an agreement was entered into prior to the adoption of the guidelines bears significance.

Facts

Appellant and appellee were divorced on 3 August 1983. The two children born of the marriage, Rafael David and Jonathan Jacob, were then ages six and three, respectively. The parties’ divorce decree incorporated a Voluntary Separation and Property Settlement Agreement (Agreement), which had been executed on 23 April 1982. It allocated child support as follows:

D. Support of Children
1. a. Subject to the provisions of paragraph (b) herein and paragraph 2 below [appellee] shall pay to [appellant] the sum of $375.00 per month per child, for a total of $750.00 per month for the two children, for the support and maintenance of the two minor children.
b. [Appellee] shall not be required to make payments for the support and maintenance of either child for any period of time during which said child remains in [appellee’s] care for two consecutive weeks or longer.
2. Said payments for the support of the minor children shall be changed or terminated as follows: (a) said payments shall increase starting May 31,1983, and each May 31st thereafter by the same percentage as [appellee’s] cost-of-living adjustment increases his income ...; (b) said payments shall be changed at such time as [appellant] remarries at which time the payments shall be renegotiated so that [appellee] will provide only out-of-pocket costs for food, clothing and other similar expenses of the children not including lodging in [appellant’s] then marital abode; (c) said payments shall terminate as to each child of the first to occur of the following events: (1) death of child; (2) arrival at age eighteen (18) years; (3) *324 marriage; (4) emancipation by full time employment; (5) death of [appellee].
3. As long as [appellee] is employed by the World Bank or is in another employment providing comparable health insurance, [appellee] shall maintain health insurance coverage for the children and shall pay the medical and dental (including orthodontia) expenses for the children not paid by insurance, provided that [appellant] consults with [appellee] prior to undertaking any such non-paid expenses in excess of $500.00 per year per child. The duty under this section shall terminate as to each child as provided in paragraph D(2)(c), supra.
4. In addition to the foregoing, [appellee] shall pay all the educational costs of the children provided that the selection of school and/or college shall be arrived at by mutual agreement of [appellee] and [appellant]. The term educational costs as used in this Agreement means school tuition, fees and books beginning at pre-school kindergarten at age 5, through the full cost of a college education for each child. [Appellee’s] obligation hereunder shall continue, with respect to each child, for four years of college, regardless of whether or not such child shall have attained majority.

On 21 February 1984, the amount of child support was modified by consent order. On 7 March 1990, appellant filed a Petition for Modification of Child Support (Petition) based on the adoption of the child support guidelines. 1 At that time, appellee’s monthly child support obligation under the Agreement was $695.00.

Hearings on the Petition were held before Domestic Relations Master S. Michael Pincus on 7 January and 21 February 1991. On 26 February 1991, the Master issued his *325 Report and Recommendations, along with a proposed order. The Master concluded, inter alia, that use of the guidelines would result in a monthly child support obligation of $1756.00 and, therefore, application of the guidelines was mandated under § 12-202(b). 2 The Master recommended that appellee’s child support obligation only be increased to $1,000.00 per month. The Master arrived at this figure by using the guidelines and then subtracting certain of appellee’s obligations under the Agreement, such as future college expenses and insurance costs.

Both parties filed exceptions to the Master’s Report and Recommendations. After a hearing on the exceptions, the circuit court accepted the Master’s Report but rejected his Recommendations, reasoning that application of the guidelines was an all-or-nothing proposition. “You can’t ... mix apples and oranges. You can’t say that the guidelines apply and then take away from them.” Instead, the court concluded that use of the guidelines would be unjust and inappropriate in the case sub judice. The court apparently based this conclusion upon the existence of the Agreement:

Here we have a very — what I find a very unusual voluntary separation and property settlement agreement. It doesn’t really have to be even unusual, but in this case it was. If you look at the way the child support was set up, it was set up to pay a certain amount of money. There was provision for college education ... there was also provision that if [appellant] remarries, the payments are going to be renegotiated to a certain amount and, in fact, they were. [There was a provision t]hat [appellee] would only provide out-of-pocket costs for food, clothing and other similar expenses not including lodging and [appellant’s then marital abode.
*326 [The agreement] also provided for an automatic cost of living adjustment as [appellee’s] income went up. It is clear that the parties, for whatever reason, struck a bargain. They struck a bargain here which represented the results of a negotiation____ [B]oth sides were represented by counsel____
Why did they enter into the agreement that they entered into? I don’t know why. If the application of the guidelines leads to a result which the parties didn’t negotiate for and didn’t bargain for, then the Court determines that would be unjust and inappropriate. (Emphasis added.)

Having concluded that use of the guidelines would be unjust and inappropriate, the court declined to consider the Petition and ordered that the case be dismissed without prejudice.

I think the position that [appellant] has to be in is if there is a sufficient change in circumstances from that contemplated in the agreement, that appropriate petition has to be filed and a factual record made.

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Bluebook (online)
612 A.2d 313, 93 Md. App. 320, 1992 Md. App. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shrivastava-v-mates-mdctspecapp-1992.