Tschirn v. Tschirn
This text of 434 So. 2d 113 (Tschirn v. Tschirn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Darryl J. TSCHIRN
v.
Mary Kathryn Harrington, Wife of Darryl J. TSCHIRN.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*114 Tschirn & Robin (Darryl J. Tschirn, in pro. per.) Covington, for appellant.
Stone, Pigman, Walther, Wittmann & Hutchinson, Phillip A. Wittmann, Kyle D. Schonekas, New Orleans, for appellee.
Before CHEHARDY, BOWES and CURRAULT, JJ.
CHEHARDY, Judge.
Following our previous opinion in this matter, rendered January 10, 1983, 434 So.2d 109, the appellee/cross-appellant, Mrs. Mary K. Kurzweg, sought and was granted writs by our Supreme Court. On March 18, 1983, the Supreme Court issued the following directive to this Court:
"Granted. The rulings of the court of appeal that judgment can be rendered only on the partial record before it (referred to as `the separation agreement') are in error and are set aside. The record is available and should be supplemented if needed by the court of appeal. The entire child support claim was placed at issue in the contempt rule. The case is remanded to the court of appeal for reconsideration and determination of the issues."
As stated in our previous opinion, child support and alimony were first established between the parties by an April 21, 1975 consent judgment setting each at $750 per month, for a monthly total of $1,500 to be paid by Mr. Tschirn to his former wife. That judgment also incorporated by reference a document entitled "Separation Agreement and Settlement of Community *115 Property." The separation agreement provided in Paragraph 12, among other things, "In addition, Darryl will pay all tuition, medical, dental, drug and hospital bills incurred by or for the benefit of the minor children."
Subsequently the former Mrs. Tschirn remarried, becoming Mrs. Kurzweg, and her alimony payments were discontinued. After her remarriage, she filed a rule to increase the child support being paid by Mr. Tschirn from $750 a month to $1,500 a month. The rule was heard in April 1981, and judgment was rendered on June 10, 1981. That judgment stated:
"After considering the testimony and the documents in evidence,
IT IS ORDERED:
(1) That DARRYL H. TSCHIRN pay the sum of $1,250.00 per month to his former wife, Mary K. Tschirn, for the support and maintenance of the two minor children born of this marriage, Darryl and Kathryn Tschirn;
(2) That Mr. Tschirn pay one-half (½) of summer camp expenses; and
(3) That Mr. Tschirn pay all costs [with] regard to the rules that were before the court on April 7, 1981.
"JUDGMENT READ, RENDERED AND SIGNED in open court in Gretna, Louisiana, this 10th day of June, 1981."
Unlike the 1975 judgment, the 1981 judgment neither referred to the separation agreement, nor specifically mentioned the payment of tuition and medical expenses. Mr. Tschirn has paid the $1,250 regularly when due, as well as half the summer camp expenses. However, he has refused Mrs. Kurzweg's demands that he continue paying the children's tuition and medical expenses. He takes the position that the 1981 judgment is complete in itself. Mrs. Kurzweg, on the other hand, insists that the 1981 judgment was always intended to supplement, not to supersede, the 1975 judgment. This appeal arises from a rule for contempt filed by Mrs. Kurzweg to collect the alleged arrearages for tuition and medical payments.
After a hearing on the contempt rule on February 17, 1982, the trial court rendered a judgment finding that Mr. Tschirn was not in contempt of court. The trial judge stated in the judgment:
"* * * [T]here is as much substance to Mr. Tschirn's contention that the June 10, 1981, judgment completely replaced the April 21, 1975, consent judgment as there is to Mrs. Kurzweg's argument that the June 10, 1981, judgment modified only the so-called `cash portion' of the earlier judgment and not the `in kind portion.'"
In an attempt to be fair to the parties, and to clarify the parties' respective rights and liabilities, the trial judge then rendered a judgment not only incorporating the provisions of the 1981 judgment ($1,250 a month child support plus one-half the children's summer camp expenses), but also including the provision that Mr. Tschirn pay all tuition, medical, dental, drug and hospital expenses thereafter incurred by his minor children.
Mr. Tschirn appealed, contending the trial judge erred by entering a new judgment restating his child support obligations because these were not properly before the court; alternatively, he argues that the "cash" portion of the child support should not have been increased because Mrs. Kurzweg failed to show a substantial change of circumstances.
Mrs. Kurzweg answered the appeal, contending the trial judge erred by failing to find Mr. Tschirn in contempt of court, and by failing to make the alleged arrearages executory. She also avers the trial court should have assessed attorney's fees and costs against Mr. Tschirn.
In our previous opinion, we refused to consider the testimony from the 1981 hearing because neither party had introduced it into evidence at the trial of the 1982 rule for contempt. We considered our refusal proper and necessary in light of LSA-C. C.P. art. 2164 and Uniform RulesCourt of Appeal, Rule 2-1.7. We are bound, however, by the supervisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and have therefore ordered the record supplemented by the district *116 court with the transcript of the testimony from the April 7, 1981 hearing.
That transcript discloses that, at the start of the proceeding, Mrs. Kurzweg's attorney stated the hearing was for an increase in the cash portion of the child support. Mrs. Kurzweg testified that she did not wish to change the part of the earlier judgment under which Mr. Tschirn paid the tuition and medical expenses. Further, during the hearing the trial judge stated,
"The Court is not going to interfere with the portion of the judgment that requires Mr. Tschirn to pay educational, drug, hospital and medical expenses or whatever that part states. I don't think that part of the rule is at issue."
On the other hand, the 1981 judgment was not rendered until June 10, more than two months after the hearing. Immediately thereafter, the parties began disputing whether it was intended to encompass Mr. Tschirn's entire child support obligation or was only a part of it. At Mr. Tschirn's suggestion, the parties attempted several times to meet with the trial judge informally to ascertain what he had intended the 1981 judgment to encompass. For various reasons, they were never able to have a joint meeting with the judge.
At the 1982 hearing on the rule for contempt, Mr. Tschirn testified he recalled the judge's statement in the 1981 hearing quoted above, but that he honestly felt, in light of the evidence produced at the 1981 hearing, "[T]he June 10 judgment was a judgment taking everything into consideration and finally saying once and for all this is what should be paid." In his brief to this court, Mr. Tschirn alleges that he was told personally by the trial judge to pay exactly what the judgment said and no more. We cannot consider these allegations per se, because they are not contained in the record before us. At the same time, we can consider the judge's statement that there was as much substance to Mr. Tschirn's interpretation of the 1981 judgment as there was to Mrs. Kurzweg's.
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