Stamler v. Stamler

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 11, 2025
Docket2D2023-2339
StatusPublished

This text of Stamler v. Stamler (Stamler v. Stamler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stamler v. Stamler, (Fla. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

JEFFERY M. STAMLER,

Appellant,

v.

LEAH M. STAMLER,

Appellee.

No. 2D2023-2339

April 11, 2025

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County; Wendy DePaul, Judge.

Jeremy T. Simons and K. Dean Kantaras of K. Dean Kantaras, P.A., Palm Harbor, for Appellant.

Eric R. Maier of Older, Lundy Koch & Martino, Tampa, for Appellee.

ATKINSON, Judge.

Jeffery Stamler (Former Husband) appeals the trial court's postjudgment final order granting in part and denying in part Leah Stamler's (Former Wife) motion for contempt and enforcement. In relevant part, the trial court concluded that Former Husband failed to reimburse Former Wife $15,793.13 in child expenses pursuant to section 4.3 of the parties' marital settlement agreement and ordered him to pay that amount. We reject Former Husband's argument that the trial court erroneously construed the agreement, but we agree that the trial court violated his procedural due process rights because it did not afford him an opportunity at the hearing to present any evidence concerning disputed factual issues. We reverse and remand for further proceedings. Background The parties have two minor children and divorced in 2021 pursuant to a final judgment of dissolution of marriage, which incorporated the marital settlement agreement at issue in this appeal. Section 4.3 of the agreement provides as follows: 4.3. In addition to the foregoing and for so long as Husband has a child support obligation, Husband shall be 100% responsible for various child related expenses as further described below. The parties acknowledge that Wife will make many of these purchases for the minor children which Husband is ultimately responsible. Wife will establish one credit card in her name that will be used exclusively for the below child related expenses. On a monthly basis, Wife will provide Husband the credit card statement used for the children's expenses. Within thirty (30) days of receipt of Wife's credit card statement, Husband shall reimburse Wife 100% of the following child-related expenses for the minor children: . . . . Section 4.3 then lists the "child-related expenses" for which Former Husband is responsible, such as the children's school tuition, tutoring costs, and cellular phone expenses. Pursuant to section 4.3, Former Wife obtained an "Athleta MasterCard" for her payment of the reimbursable child-related expenses. In March 2023, Former Wife filed a motion for contempt and enforcement, alleging that Former Husband stopped reimbursing her for the minor children's expenses as of April 2022. She scheduled a one- hour hearing on the motion. According to Former Wife's testimony,

2 Former Husband resumed making payments after the motion was filed, but despite making payments in June, July, and August of 2023, he still owed $15,793.13. She introduced a spreadsheet into evidence that listed the various expenses for which she contended she was entitled to be reimbursed and noted whether they had been paid or were still owed. The spreadsheet indicated that she paid many of the child-related expenses with her Athleta MasterCard. However, Former Wife testified that she also used means other than her Athleta MasterCard to pay many of the child-related expenses for which she sought reimbursement. Her spreadsheet indicated that she paid for expenses through methods and sources such as the money transfer application Venmo, a Bank of America account, and a Chase Bank account. In other instances, the spreadsheet merely listed generic documentary support for an expense such as "invoice" or "screenshot attached" without reference to the actual payment method used. Former Wife testified that she used other payment methods for "things [she] could not put on the Athleta credit card" and for the "[o]ne or two times [she] mistakenly did not have the Athleta card with" her. Former Husband argued that under section 4.3, he was not responsible for reimbursing child-related expenses that Former Wife paid through means other than the Athleta MasterCard. An objection made during Former Husband's cross-examination of Former Wife led to a discussion among the parties and the trial court regarding the meaning of section 4.3. The trial court rejected Former Husband's reading of the provision, instead explaining that the agreement "says . . . that card will be used exclusively for expenses, but it doesn't say that she can't use other means to pay." "[I]t looks like that card can only be used for the children's expenses. That doesn't mean you can't pay the children's

3 expenses in other ways." Regarding the time period for reimbursement of child-related expenses, the trial court opined that under the agreement, payment would be required "in 30 days if it's on the credit card." "If it wasn't on the credit card, I don't know how much time you have to reimburse. It doesn't say." The trial court then informed the parties there was "maybe 10 minutes left" for the hearing. After Former Husband finished cross-examining Former Wife, the trial court said, "I don't even know that we have time for redirect at this point because we've already gone through an hour." The trial court then revisited its interpretation of section 4.3, reasoning that "it is clear" Former Husband is "ultimately responsible for paying" the expenses but that section 4.3 was ambiguous regarding whether the Athleta MasterCard "is the only form of payment that may be used for those expenses." The trial court also reasoned that notwithstanding the other payment sources, "there were still certain expenses that were on the [Athleta] credit card that were not paid within 30 days and that is clear." Former Husband responded that he had already reimbursed Former Wife for the expenses she paid with the Athleta credit card, though he acknowledged he did not do so timely, and reiterated that he was not obligated to reimburse the child-related expenses that Former Wife paid through other means. Discussion regarding the meaning of section 4.3 continued until the trial court interjected that it was "now 15 minutes late for [its] next hearing" and that it was "done with testimony." The following exchange ensued: [HUSBAND'S COUNSEL]: Your Honor, I have a couple of cases, but my client hadn't even testified yet. So you can't – I'm not understanding. THE COURT: You scheduled this for an hour. [HUSBAND'S COUNSEL]: I didn't schedule it.

4 THE COURT: It's a contempt motion. It's not a trial. The trial court ultimately stated that it was "out of time" but that it thought section 4.3 was "vague enough" that it would only consider the issue of enforcement and not contempt. Former Husband reminded the trial court that "the other issue is [his] client didn't testify and he probably has a different version." The trial court concluded the hearing but allowed the parties some time to submit case law before it issued a final ruling. The trial court later issued a written order granting Former Wife's request for enforcement but denying her request for contempt. The trial court reasoned that it was "clear" Former Husband was responsible to pay 100% of the child-related expenses. The trial court explained that it "received evidence that the . . . remaining amount due as of the date of the hearing is $15,793.13" and that there was "no evidence that the expenses incurred were unreasonable or not in compliance with the" agreement, so it ordered Former Husband to pay that amount to Former Wife. Analysis Former Husband argues on appeal that the trial court erroneously construed section 4.3 of the agreement and violated his procedural due process rights, both of which are pure issues of law that we review de novo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Stamler v. Stamler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamler-v-stamler-fladistctapp-2025.