Vaccari v. Vaccari

50 So. 3d 139, 2010 La. LEXIS 2825, 2010 WL 5029321
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 10, 2010
DocketNo. 2010-C-2016
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 50 So. 3d 139 (Vaccari v. Vaccari) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaccari v. Vaccari, 50 So. 3d 139, 2010 La. LEXIS 2825, 2010 WL 5029321 (La. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

_|jWe granted this writ to clarify under what circumstances an award of final child support may be made retroactive to the date of judicial demand.

During the hearing on Joan Vaccari’s demand for interim child support, Christian Vaccari, her ex-husband, submitted an affidavit stating that his 2004 income was approximately $262,000. He was ordered to pay $7,000 per month in interim child support. A court-appointed CPA later determined that Mr. Vaceari’s actual 2004 income was far higher than he had previously claimed. Based on this newly discovered evidence, the court awarded Ms. Vaccari a final monthly child support payment of $16,546. The trial court ordered the final support award retroactive to the date of Ms. Vaccari’s judicial demand. The court of appeal reversed and held the trial court had no statutory authority to make the award retroactive.

We reverse and reinstate the judgment of the trial court, finding the relevant statute does not forbid a court from rendering a final child support award retroactive, and good cause exists for the trial court to do [141]*141so here. This is not to say a final child support award must be retroactive, or even that it should be made retroactive in every ^proceeding. But in cases such as this one, where a party files a false affidavit in an effort to avoid the full extent of his child support obligation, it is only proper to make the award retroactive so he will not benefit from his own misdeeds.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Vaccaris married in 1989, and have four children. Mr. Vaccari filed for divorce in early 2004. On March 4, 2004, Ms. Vaccari filed an answer and reconven-tional demand seeking, inter alia, child support.

During the initial hearing for an interim child support award, Mr. Vaccari represented his net income during 2004, exclusive of taxes, was $262,273. Based on this stated income, the hearing officer recommended Mr. Vaccari be ordered to pay $7,000 in interim monthly child support.1 On March 5, 2005, the court adopted the hearing officer’s recommendation:

[W]ithout any prejudice whatsoever to the rights of the parties, concerning the ultimate amount of child support, Christian Vaccari shall pay cash child support in the amount of $7,000 per month, retroactive to the date that the Court’s Hearing Officer made the written recommendation for the child support in the amount of $7,000 per month.

Discovery in this case was contentious, as each party accused the other of withholding relevant financial information including tax returns and corporate records. Most notably, Ms. Vaccari accused Mr. Vaccari of hiding large amounts of income from the closely held companies he owned and controlled. At a hearing on the interim child support award held on May 22 and 23, 2006, the court discovered Mr. Vaccari’s 2004 net income was far higher than previously believed — over $3.5 million, according to an expert accountant retained by Ms. Vaccari. During this | .^hearing, the trial court expressed understandable frustration at the parties’ ongoing discovery battles and Mr. Vaccari’s refusal to provide full and complete records. On its own motion, the court appointed Greg Verges, a CPA, as a neutral expert in forensic accounting with access to both the parties’ financial documents and records.

Although the discovery disputes continued, Verges was able to gather enough information by January 26, 2007 to prepare a preliminary report reflecting that Mr. Vaccari’s income and means were significantly higher than had been previously represented. On March 26, 2007, Ms. Vac-cari asked the court to adopt the findings of the Verges report. The court declined:

[T]he oral motion of Ms. Vaccari to adopt the initial report of Gregory Verges, CPA is denied due to the fact the Court has ordered that any final judgment of support shall be retroactive to the original date of filing.

Although Mr. Vaccari immediately appealed this order, the appeal was soon withdrawn by consent of the parties.

Trial was held on July 27, 2007. Based on additional evidence introduced at trial, Verges prepared a final report dated November 30, 2007. The parties filed post-trial briefs, and judgment was entered on October 3, 2008. The court adopted Verges’s recommended child support award of $16,546:

[142]*142[T]he monthly child support payable by Christian Vaccari to Joan Y. Vaccari shall be $16,546.00, retroactive to the date of filing, namely March 4, 2004. This sum is the amount recommended by Mr. Verges in his final report of November 30, 2007. The payment shall be made in two equal semi-monthly installments on the first and fifteenth days of the month.

Mr. Vaccari filed a motion for new trial, which was denied. On appeal, the judgment was affirmed in part and amended in part. Vaccari v. Vaccari, 2009-1945 (La. App. 1 Cir. 7/29/10), 41 So.3d 662. Although the appeal raised several assignments of error, only one issue — the purported retroactivity of the child support | Judgment — is the subject of the instant writ. The court of appeal, following its prior decision in Moran v. Moran, 02-1562 (La.App. 1 Cir. 6/27/03), 858 So.2d 581, writ denied 03-2124 (La.11/7/03), 857 So.2d 502, held La.Rev.Stat. § 9:315.21 does not permit a trial court to render a final judgment of child support retroactive to the date of judicial demand when there is an interim child support award in effect. We disagree.

DISCUSSION

This Court has long recognized Louisiana’s strong public policy requiring parents to provide for the maintenance and support of their children. For over two hundred years, Louisiana law has provided “Fathers and mothers, by the very act of marrying, contract together the obligation of nourishing, maintaining and educating their children.”2 Digest of the Civil Laws Now in Force in the Territory of Orleans bk. I, tit. VII, art. 46 (1808). This provision remains substantively unchanged as current Civil Code art. 227, and evidences a “conjoint obligation of both parents ... with each parent contributing in proportion to his or her resources.” Guilliot v. Munn, 99-2132 (La.3/24/00), 756 So.2d 290, 295-96.

It has long been the law that a child support judgment may be rendered retroactively: “retroactivity is intrinsic to the concept of child support under Louisiana’s civilian tradition ... Louisiana law ‘abhors a gap in the support of one in need.’ ” Fink v. Bryant, 01-0987 (La.11/28/01), 801 So.2d 346, 350, quoting Hogan v. Hogan, 549 So.2d 267, 271 (La.1989). Retroactivity in this context “is not in the nature of a penalty, but merely a judicial recognition of pre-existing entitlement. |sOnly practicality postpones the effective date of the obligation to pay child support to the date a court orders that payment.” Id. at 350 (citations omitted).

La.Rev.Stat. § 9:315.21 sets forth when a court may render a child support judgment retroactive:

A.

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Bluebook (online)
50 So. 3d 139, 2010 La. LEXIS 2825, 2010 WL 5029321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaccari-v-vaccari-la-2010.