Stach v. Stach

369 N.W.2d 132, 1985 S.D. LEXIS 298
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1985
Docket14468
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 369 N.W.2d 132 (Stach v. Stach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stach v. Stach, 369 N.W.2d 132, 1985 S.D. LEXIS 298 (S.D. 1985).

Opinion

MORGAN, Justice.

This appeal is from an order issued by the trial court in the last of a series of contempt proceedings initiated by the parties against each other. Appellant, Robert Stach (Robert), filed an Affidavit and Application for Show Cause Order (application for show cause order) to compel appellee, Gloria Barnes (Gloria), his ex-wife, to allow him to exercise his visitation rights and to pay him his share of the equity in the family home in accord with the stipulations incorporated in a modified divorce decree. Gloria filed an application for show cause order to compel Robert to make child support payments. A show cause hearing was held and the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law and issued an order. Robert appeals from that order. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.

Gloria and Robert were divorced in October of 1980. A Stipulation and Agreement was incorporated into the divorce decree under which Gloria received custody of the three children subject to Robert’s visitation rights. 1 Robert agreed to pay child support of $350.00 per month and Gloria agreed to pay $15,000.00 for Robert’s equity in their house in five equal annual installments beginning January 1, 1981. Under paragraph 7(b) of the agreement incorporated in the original decree, any unpaid balance of the $15,000.00 equity was accelerated and became due three months after Gloria commenced cohabitation in the residence with any adult. The agreement provided for ten percent interest on any delinquent payments.

Within six months of the divorce decree, Robert initiated the first contempt proceeding. He filed an application for show cause order on April 2, 1981, in an effort to compel payment of the first $3,000.00 installment on the $15,000.00 equity payment and to request acceleration of the balance pursuant to paragraph 7(b) of the stipulation and agreement. Gloria was asked to show why she should not be required to pay the $15,000.00 plus ten percent interest from December 1980, the month Robert Barnes, her present husband, moved into the house.

As a result of the initial contempt action, the parties stipulated and agreed to modify the original decree. Gloria acknowledged that she had cohabited with an unrelated adult since December 1, 1980, and that, as a consequence, under the original decree she owed Robert $15,000.00, plus ten percent interest from March 1, 1981. Robert stipulated that he would not pursue action for payment until March 1, 1982. A court order modifying the original decree, in accordance with the stipulation, was entered on May 21, 1981.

Robert filed a second application for show cause order on August 6, 1982, in an attempt to enforce his visitation rights and to collect the equity payment and interest, none of which had been paid. Although the order was issued, apparently nothing was resolved in that proceeding. On May 20,1983, Robert filed a third application for show cause order. He again alleged that Gloria had denied him his visitation rights *134 and had failed to pay him any portion of the equity payment.

In response, Gloria signed an application for show cause order which alleged that Robert had made no child support payments from November of 1982 to June of 1983 and that he was $2,250.00 in arrears. Gloria admitted that she owed the $15,-000.00 but denied that she owed interest, based on her contention that she had offered to pay Robert the $15,000.00 over “an extended period of time” and that his implied refusal to accept payment precluded any interest on the amount due. Gloria argued that Robert did not have “clean hands” as a result of his failure to pay child support and, on that basis, she requested the trial court to dismiss Robert’s application for show cause order. Gloria also requested increased child support payments, a lien for child support on the $15,-000.00 equity payment in the event she turned it over, and a modification of the visitation provisions.

Based on the evidence and testimony presented at the show cause hearing, the exhibits of record, a psychological report on the two children, and Robert’s brief, the trial court issued findings of fact, conclusions of law and an order. Gloria was ordered to comply with the trial court’s prior decree regarding visitation, and to pay Robert $15,000.00 for his equity in the marital home, plus ten percent interest from May 20, 1983, the date Robert filed his application for show cause order. Gloria was allowed to deduct the child support Robert withheld from the $15,000.00 equity payment. Gloria’s request for modification of child visitation privileges, her request for an increase in child support, and her request to impress any balance due on the equity payment as security for child support payments were all denied. Each party’s request for a contempt citation against the other for failure to abide by the trial court’s previous decrees was denied. Each party was ordered to bear their own attorney fees and costs of the action.

Robert raises four issues on this appeal, and we shall discuss them in the following order: (1) Whether he is entitled to interest on the $15,000.00 equity payment from March 1, 1981, the date agreed to by the parties, or from May 20, 1983, the date selected by the trial court, (2) whether the court erred in deducting the past due child support payments from the $15,000.00 equity payment that Gloria owed Robert, (3) whether the trial court should have cited Gloria for contempt in light of her arbitrary denial of visitation and failure to pay the $15,000.00, and (4) whether he is entitled to attorney fees because the court found that Gloria arbitrarily denied him visitation and failed to pay the $15,000.00 owed him.

We first consider whether the trial court erred in ordering interest on the equity payment at ten percent per annum from May 20, 1983, rather than from March 1, 1981. The trial court’s findings noted that “on May 14, 1981, the parties entered into an agreement to modify the decree whereby plaintiff agreed she owes defendant $15,000.00 plus interest at ten percent from March 1, 1981.” (Emphasis added.) Modification of the original decree in this respect was carried into effect by an order of the court issued on the same date. In its conclusions of law, however, the trial court concluded that “plaintiff shall pay the entire balance of the $15,000.00 together with ten percent interest from the date of the filing of defendant’s order to show cause of May 20, 1983 [.]” (Emphasis added.)

We find nothing in the record to support changing the date from which the interest must be paid. In appellee’s brief, counsel surmises that it was to offset interest on the arrearages of child support due from Robert to Gloria. 2 There is certainly nothing in the record to support this assumption.

*135 Counsel further suggests that the trial court’s action was proper under our holding in Fait v. Fait, 345 N.W.2d 872 (S.D.1984). Relying upon Fait, he suggests that trial courts may exercise broad discretion in dividing marital property and in enforcing the division. He contends that a trial court’s disposition of marital property will not be set aside absent a clear abuse of discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
369 N.W.2d 132, 1985 S.D. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stach-v-stach-sd-1985.