ALIMONY IS NOT FOR EQUALIZING THE DIVISION

February 22, 2012 § Leave a comment

What is the proper role of alimony vis a vis equitable distribution? In Williamson v. Williamson, decided by the COA on January 10, 2012, Judge Carlton’s opinion stated:

¶21. The record reflects that in equitably dividing the marital property, the chancellor erroneously applied the Armstrong factors by awarding Mary alimony in order to create equalization of the parties’ incomes. The chancellor then ordered Will to pay Mary $594 per month to be applied toward the mortgage on the marital home; and, in addition to that amount, the chancellor awarded Mary $200 per month in periodic alimony, for a total of $794, or approximately $800, until the former home sold. [Footnote omitted] As evidenced by the chancellor’s findings, the chancellor accomplished the ordered equitable division of the marital property by aid of an award of periodic alimony in favor of Mary in order to make the parties’ financial situations “equalized.” The record shows, as set forth in the excerpts herein, that the chancellor had not completed an equitable division of the marital property prior to considering alimony. In accordance with precedent, the equitable division of the marital property must be completed prior to determining if either spouse suffers a deficit in the division of the marital estate warranting an award of alimony. The record in this case shows, however, that the chancellor used alimony to equalize the parties’ future incomes instead of awarding alimony based upon need existing after completion of an equitable division of the marital property.

¶22. Mississippi now embraces the process of equitable division of the marital property. In applying the “equitable” division of the marital property in accordance with the Ferguson factors, alimony fails to serve as the primary method to equalize property division. See Lowrey, 25 So. 3d at 292 (¶44) (“[A]limony has become a secondary remedy to property division . . . . ‘One of the goals of adopting equitable distribution was to alleviate the need for alimony.’”). Alimony, instead, assists in the event the chancellor determines that a need exists by a spouse after the completion of the equitable division of the marital property. See id. at 293 (¶44) (“If the situation is such that an equitable division of marital property, considered with each party’s non-marital assets, leaves a deficit for one party, then alimony based on the value of non-marital assets should be considered.”); George v. George, 22 So. 3d 424, 428 (¶7) (Miss. Ct. App. 2009) (“[A]n award of periodic alimony is based upon need.”).

The proper procedure follows this sequence:

  1. Determine which assets are marital and which are non-marital;
  2. Adjudicate the values of both marital and non-marital assets;
  3. Apply the Ferguson factors to the proof in the record to determine whether there should be an equitable division of the marital estate, and, if so, how it should be accomplished;
  4. If the equitable division of the marital estate, considered with each party’s non-marital property, leaves a deficit for one party, then the court should analyze the evidence in light of the Armstrong factors to determine whether alimony should be awarded.

From a pratice standpoint, then, here is what you need to give the chancellor so that she or he can do the job:

  • An itemization of all assets, showing which your client claims to be marital and which your client claims to be non-marital. The best way to present this itemization is through lists introduced into evidence, rather than just a narration by your client. Have your client testify as to her basis for putting each asset into either category.
  • Assign values to each asset. In advance of trial have your client assign values to each asset. Real property, heavy equipment, leaseholds, buildings, fine art and jewelry, business operations and interests, and other assets other than automobiles and ordinary personal property should have values established by appraisals. Again, this should be done by lists and documentation as much as possible, although experts may be needed as to some items.
  • Offer proof as to each Ferguson factor. Have a copy of the factors to use as an outline as you develop testimony at trial. You might also want to look at the Cheatham factors for lump-sum alimony.
  • Whether your client is trying to get alimony or trying to resist it, put on proof as to the Armstrong factors. Have a copy of the factors to use as an outline as you develop testimony at trial.

In my opinion, one of the chief causes of failure on appeal is that the lawyers do an inadequate job of making a record that the chancellor can use in making a decision. This forces the trial judge to have to patch something together in an attempt to cover everything, and the result is a flaw that the COA will find reversible. Make your record as airtight as the truth allows.

DID COLLEGE SUPPORT JUST GET BIGGER?

February 21, 2012 § 2 Comments

Teresa and Charles Zweber got an irreconcilable differences divorce by consent in 2006. A special master heard their case, and the chancellor entered a judgment of divorce. Charles got custody of the parties’ daughter, Lindsey, and Teresa was awarded custody of the son, Daniel. Paragraph 9 of the judgment addressed the parties’ college support obligation. It reads in part:

“The Husband and Wife shall each be required to pay for the cost of the minor children, with Husband paying two-thirds (2/3) of the expense and Wife paying one-third (1/3) of the expense, based on the cost of the child attending college at a four[-]year state[-]supported institution in such state as the child is a resident of. All costs are to be based on the average costs of meals, tuition, books and room, published in a state[-]supported catalog and not to exceed the cost of a four[-]year state[-]supported institution. This obligation shall continue even if the child is over twenty-one (21) years of age prior to the completion of college.”

When Lindsey reached college age, she opted to attend Delta State University (DSU) and enrolled in that school’s commercial aviation program. The degree curriculum requires that the student take flight-training courses, most of which are at the student’s own expense. The expense is considerable: the university’s own published figures state that students can expect to spend around $55,000 for all of the required flight-training courses. Of course, as with all college students, Lindsey spent money in addition for books, tuition, pencils, paper, gasoline for her car, pizzas, makeup, hamburgers, hairdos, laptops and related paraphernalia, etc., etc., etc.

Charles sent Teresa a bill for her share of Lindsey’s college expenses. Included were the usual dorm and meal plan expenses, along with the charges for the flying instructions. Teresa deducted the flight instruction costs and began remitting a monthly payment to Charles for her share.

At trial the chancellor found that the flight-training expenses were necessary for Lindsey’s college degree, and ordered Teresa to pay up. Teresa appealed, claiming that the chancellor was in error due to the specific language of the college expense provision of the divorce judgment, which Teresa read to limit each party’s liability.

In a decision rendered February 14, 2012, in Zweber v. Zweber, Judge Griffis, writing for the majority of the COA, pointed out that the requirement of flying lessons and their cost were spelled out in the DSU catalog, and that they were required to complete the degree. In a masterful understatement, Judge Griffis observed at ¶ 17 that “Indeed, it does make sense that a student would have to learn to fly before he or she could graduate from a commercial aviation program.”

The opinion goes on to state:

In Lawrence v. Lawrence, 574 So. 2d 1376, 1382 (Miss. 1991), the supreme court held: “Though college expenses are not technically ‘child support,’ a parent may be ordered by the court to pay them. A parent may also be ordered to pay some portion of the resulting expenses of college, in addition just to tuition.” (Citing Wray v. Langston, 380 So. 2d 1262, 1264 (Miss. 1980)). Today, the cost of a college education is not simply limited to meals, tuition, books, and room. Instead, all related fees and expenses of the child’s college education must be considered. This includes the direct expenses charged by the college or university (i.e., tuition, on-campus housing, fees, books, or other related expenses), as well as indirect expenses that are necessary for the child to live as a college student (i.e., offcampus housing, meals, transportation, insurance, computers, clothing, and personal expenses). Indeed, all of these costs are required for the child to complete successfully his or her college education. We recognize that not every parent can afford to pay these costs. The law provides that the chancellor, not this Court, is in the best position to make this determination. Based on our de novo review, we determine that the chancellor’s decision on this issue was correct. We therefore affirm the chancellor’s judgment.

I may be wrong, but I don’t recall the appellate courts setting out a more expansive definition of college education expenses before now.

There are implications here for your PSA’s. In essence, what the COA is telling you is that, unless you specifically carve categories of expenses out of the definition of college support, your client may face some additional expenses that never occurred to you in drafting it. That could be unpleasant to have to explain to the client after the expenses were incurred.

What about where the non-custodial parent is paying college education support and child support? It would be prudent, for example, to spell out that the child support will go toward your client’s share of “Junior’s transportation, off-campus housing and all other living expenses while at college,” or some such language that covers your situation.

In any case, you should specifically carve out and allocate those living expenses, such as “Husband will be responsible to pay the cost of Junior’s automobile, including maintenance not to exceed $1,000 per year, and gasoline and oil not to sxceed $200 a month, and wife shall be responsible to pay the off-campus apartment rent and utilities,” or something like that. If you don’t, the sky’s the limit.

There are a couple of other aspects of this case that deserve your attention. I recommend that you read it. After you read it, I urge you to consider the language in your PSA’s addressing that college support obligation and whether you are adequately protecting the interests of your client.

AMENDING BY THE BOOK

February 15, 2012 § 2 Comments

Things seem to go in phases. A motion to do thus and such is filed, finds some success, and a slew of others follow. Or a court of appeals decision makes a point, and a salvo of pleadings ensue.

Lately, a phase in pleadings is for lawyers to file successive so-called “amended” or “supplemental” pleadings and answers thereto, along with counterclaims (bearing all manner of names, such as “counter-motions,” “cross-complaints,” “counterpetitions,” etc., etc., etc.), and responses thereto, to the extent that casting the pleadings for trial is like assembling a jigsaw puzzle. Nearly always, this plethora of pleadings is filed in a willy-nilly cascade of paperwork without any leave of or input by the court. It does not have to be, nor should it be, this way.

MRCP 15 lays out an orderly process for amendments that is fairly simple if followed. Here’s the simple scheme laid out in Rule 15(a):

  1. You may amend at any time, without leave of court, before an answer is served.
  2. If your pleading is one to which no answer is permitted,  you may amend without leave of court at any time within 30 days after service of process, unless the matter has been placed on the trial calendar.
  3. Any other amendment will require leave of court, with notice to the other side and opportunity to be heard, OR written consent of the adverse party or parties.

It’s really that simple. There are some other interesting wrinkles in Rule 15, and we’ll touch on them, but the important thing to remember is that if your pleadings don’t meet the criteria in 1 and 2 above, you must file a motion and get permission of the court to amend or get an agreed order. Note that the rule requires “written consent.” I take that to mean an agreed order of the court, not a handshake deal that is later the subject of heated dispute.

An important caveat: Rule 15 specifically says that leave to amend shall be freely given. Don’t confuse that principle with freely amending without leave of court.

The importance of following the requirements of Rule 15(a) is illustrated by what happened in Lone Star Industries, et al. v. McGraw, decided February 2, 2012. In that case, the Mississippi Supreme Court held that the circuit judge should have dismissed a second amended complaint for failure of the plaintiff to get leave of court before filing it. As a result, some plaintiffs were dismissed from the suit, and the statute of limitations (SOL) has likely run.

You can have a similarly unpleasant result in chancery, although we seldom deal with SOL. Imagine that you have unilaterally updated your modification pleadings 10 days before trial to bring up some claims that surfaced in discovery, only to face an objection at trial that you did not comply with Rule 15. The judge should sustain the objection and throw out your updated claims. In a modification case, that could be significant to your client, because the judgment that results from this trial will time bar any later claims based on acts that precede it.

So, how do you successfully update your pleadings to capture transactions, occurrences or events related to the original claim that occurred after the filing of the original pleadding? You file a motion pursuant to Rule 15(d). If you can’t get the other side to agree via an agreed court order, you should call your motion to amend up for hearing right away, because the judge can deny your request if to grant it would prejudice the other party, as, for instance where you wait until immediately before or the day of trial.

Rule 15(b) says that even if you have not amended, you may be able to get your amendment anyway if you present evidence that is outside the scope of the pleadings at trial and the other side does not object. The court in such a case may allow the pleadings to be amended to conform to the proof. That’s the subject of a post to come later.

Amendments relate back to the date of filing of the original pleading, if they arise out of the same conduct, transaction or occurrence set forth “or attempted to be set forth” in the original pleading. That’s what Rule 15(c) provides, and it has some important language about adding parties.

Sloppy amendment practice makes a mess out of litigation. Recently I delayed a trial and ordered the parties to file updated, consolidated pleadings where there was a train of pleadings extending back to 2008, with petitions, counterclaims, responses and answers to responses of such byzantine proportions that I could not discern what were the issues in the case. I suspect that when the case bubbles back up, many of the issues will have fallen by the wayside, and we will have a streamlined, current, sensible package of issues for adjudication. Or at least that’s what I’m hoping.

JUDGE, JURY … AND INTERROGATOR

February 14, 2012 § 2 Comments

Lawyers frequently refer to the fact that chancellors are “judge and jury” because the chancellor makes findings of fact as well as conclusions of law in the case.

But there’s another legitimate role of the chancellor … developer of the facts. It’s a duty of chancellors long recognized in our jurisprudence, as this passage from the venerable case of Moore v. Sykes’ Estate, 167 Miss. 212, 219-221, 149 So. 789, 791 (1933), illustrates:

“Ever since our chancery court system has been in operation in this state, going back to the earlier days of our judicial history, it has been an established and well-recognized part of that system that one of the important obligations of the chancellor is to see that causes are fully and definitely developed on the facts, and that so far as practicable every issue on the merits shall be covered in testimony, if available, rather than that results may be labored out by inferences, or decisions reached for want of testimony when the testimony at hand discloses that other and pertinent testimony can be had, and which when had will furnish a firmer path upon which to travel towards the justice of the case in hand. The power and obligation reaches back into the ancient days of chancery when the chancellor called the parties before him and conducted a thorough and searching examination of the parties and the available witnesses and decreed accordingly. And, while now this duty of calling the witnesses and the conduct of their examination is placed in the first instance and generally throughout on counsel, the power and duty of the chancellor in that respect is not thereby abrogated; and while to be exercised only in cases in which it is fairly clear that the duty of the chancellor to intervene has arrived and is present, when that situation does arise and is perceived to be present, the duty must be exercised and is as obligatory as any other responsible duty which the constitution of the court imposes on the chancellor.”

And where the attorneys have failed to develop the proof necessary, the chancellor may reopen the proof, or leave the record open to acquire the necessary proof, so as to be able to adjudicate the case. In In re Prine’s Estate, 208 So.2d 187, 192-93 (Miss. 1968), the court said:

“More than a half century ago our Supreme Court in Beard v. Green, 51 Miss. (856) 859, expressly pronounced upon the obligation and responsibility mentioned, and in that case said: ‘The power of the chancery court to remand a cause for further proof at any time before final decree, and in some cases after it, either with or without the consent of parties, is one of the marked characteristics distinguishing it from a court of law, and is one of its most salutary and beneficent powers. It should always be exercised where it is necessary to the ascertainment of the true merits of the controversy.’ And the court went on to say that it was immaterial as to how the necessity of the action by the court arose, whether through inattention or misapprehension or misconception by counsel or litigants, and that none of these or the like should be allowed to prevent the doing of justice. And the duty of the chancellor in this respect was again declared in a later case, McAllister v. Richardson, 103 Miss. (418), 433, 60 So. 570, 572, wherein it was pointed out that the duty, and this of course carries the power, is not only to remand to rules, but includes the obligation on the part of the chancellor during the hearing to see ‘that all proper testimony was introduced to enable him to render a decision giving exact justice between the contending parties’-to conduct the hearing in such manner ‘that all testimony which will throw light upon the matters in controversy is introduced,‘ and that he is within his privileges and duties in aiding to bring out further competent and relevant evidence during the examination of the witnesses who are produced.”

The ancient practice is incorporated in MRE 614, which expressly provides that “The court may, on its own motion or at the suggestion of a party, call witnesses, and all parties are entitled to cross-examine witnesses thus called.”  The rule goes on to say that the court may itself interrogate any witness called by anyone, and objections to the court calling or interrogating a witness in chancery should be contemporaneous.

Imagine a case where only one side puts on proof of the Albright factors in a child custody case with horrific allegations. The neglectful side is represented by counsel who is not quite up to the task. Should the chancellor allow the best interest of a child to be determined on lopsided proof? Or should she let the better-represented side play “gotcha!”? Neither. As Albright itself reiterates, the polestar consideration is the best interest of the child. In her role as the child’s superior guardian (Carpenter v. Berry, 58 So.3d 1158, 1163 (Miss. 2011)), the chancellor has the duty to make sure that there is adequate proof in the record before making a decision. Rule 614 and the judge’s authority to reopen or leave the record open are the tools that the judge can put to good use.

It goes without saying that this considerable power should be exercised with discretion. There is the well-worn tale of the chancellor who interrupted counsel’s questioning of a witness and proceeded into his own lengthy cross examination. The attorney asked to approach the bench and told the judge, “Your honor, I don’t mind you questioning my witness, but please don’t lose the case for me.” So, a judge can be too fond of the sound of his own voice. The balance, perhaps, was laid out best by the Mississippi Supreme Court in Bumpus v. State, 166 Miss. 267, 144 So. 897 (1932): “It is true that ‘an overspeaking judge is no well-tuned cymbal,’ but, in language somewhat similar to that of Mr. Justice McReynolds, in Berger v. U. S., 255 U. S. 43, 41 S. Ct. 230, 65 L. Ed. 489, neither is an aphonic dummy a becoming receptacle for judicial power.”

THE LATEST ON DISCOVERY GAMESMANSHIP

February 13, 2012 § Leave a comment

Discovery gamesmanship has been the subject of a prior post on this blog. It’s a troublesome phenomenon, not only for the lawyers who have to confront and deal with it, but also for chancellors who have to decide whether, when and how to impose sanctions.  

The most recent pronouncement from our appellate courts came in the case of Williamson v. Williamson decided by the COA on January 10, 2012, at ¶¶ 29-31.

In Williamson, the appellant, Will, argued that the chancellor had improperly assessed him with attorney’s fees for failing to file complete and timely responses to the other side’s discovery requests. Judge Carlton’s opinion disposed of his claim:

¶29.  Additionally, as to Will’s argument that the chancellor erred by awarding Mary attorney’s fees for her costs in filing the motion to compel, we, likewise, find no merit. We recognize the chancellor possesses sole discretion as to whether sanctions should be imposed for discovery violations, and we employ an abuse-of-discretion standard of review when considering a chancellor’s order of sanctions. Williams v. Williams, 43 So. 3d 517, 521-22 (¶19) (Miss. Ct. App. 2010) (citing Hayes v. Entergy Miss., Inc., 871 So. 2d 743, 747 (¶11) (Miss. 2004)). Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 37(a)(4) provides:

If the motion [to compel] is granted, the court shall, after opportunity for hearing, require the party or deponent whose conduct necessitated the motion or the party or attorney advising such conduct or both of them to pay to the moving party the reasonable expenses incurred in obtaining the order, including attorney’s fees, unless the court finds that the opposition to the motion was substantially justified or that other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.

¶30. The record shows that Will failed to provide complete and timely responses to Mary’s requests for discovery prior to Mary filing her motion to compel. The record also reflects Will provided no adequate reason for his failure to comply. Thus, in accordance with Rule 37, we find no error in the chancellor’s order requiring Will to pay Mary’s attorney’s fees for her cost incurred in bringing the motion to compel. See Russell v. Russell, 733 So. 2d 858, 862-63 (¶16) (Miss. Ct. App. 1999).

¶31. Accordingly, we find no merit to Will’s arguments as to chancellor’s … award of attorney’s fees to Mary.

In this district, attorneys have a long-established custom of trying to work with each other through discovery problems, but sometimes the payback for that civility is abuse of the system. The judges generally view the initial motion to compel as a warning shot resulting in an order to comply, with a second trip to court triggering sanctions if warranted by the proof. I often will impose a $25 per day fine for each day after the court-imposed deadline that a party fails to comply, and I do not limit my sanctions to that. I also use scheduling orders in almost all cases, particularly divorces, and a party who pushes the deadlines and fails to compy risks running afoul of the court on that count.

As Williamson clearly indicates, you play games with discovery at your and your client’s peril. Thankfully, most attorneys in this part of the world have grown past the gamesmanship in chancery court, and for the most part discovery proceeds in an orderly fashion with both sides able to accumulate the evidence they need to present their respective cases to the court in a complete fashion. For those who persist in non-compliance, however, read Williamson and be warned.

NOT A MATHEMATICAL FORMULA

February 8, 2012 § Leave a comment

Some lawyers approach the Albright factors like some kind of score card. I remind you, however, that “The Albright factors are a guide. They are not the equivalent of a mathematical formula.” Lawrence v. Lawrence, 956 So.2d 251, 258 (Miss. App. 2006); Lee v. Lee, 798 So.2d 1284, 1288 (Miss. 2001).

In Divers v. Divers, 856 So.2d 370, 376 (Miss. App. 2003) the COA said:

In the difficult matter of determining child custody in divorce proceedings, the chancellor is necessarily vested with substantial discretion. Shepherd v. Shepherd, 769 So.2d 242, 245(¶ 11) (Miss.Ct.App.2000). In Hamilton v. Hamilton, this Court reviewed the record in that case and found that the chancellor should consider each Albright factor specifically in her decision for child custody. Id at (¶ 10). See also Hayes v. Rounds, 658 So.2d 863, 865 (Miss.1995). We found that it is not enough for the chancellor to simply state that she considered these factors. Hamilton, 755 So.2d at 530-31; Hayes, 658 So.2d at 865. If substantial evidence exists to support the chancellor’s finding of fact, broad discretion is afforded her determination. McEwen v. McEwen, 631 So.2d 821, 823 (Miss.1994).

In Johnson v. Gray, 859 So.2d 1006, 1013 (Miss. 2003), the supreme court said:

… a chancellor is never obliged to ignore a child’s best interest in weighing a custody change; in fact, a chancellor is bound to consider the child’s best interest above all else. ‘Above all, in ‘modification cases, as in original awards of custody,’ we never depart from our polestar consideration: the best interest and welfare of the child.’ ” Riley v. Doerner, 677 So.2d 740, 744 (Miss.1996) (quoting Ash v. Ash, 622 So.2d 1264, 1266 (Miss.1993)) (citing Marascalco, 445 So.2d at 1382). See also Albright v. Albright, 437 So.2d 1003, 1005 (Miss.1983). A modification of custody is warranted in the event that the moving parent successfully shows that an application of the Albright factors reveals that there had been a material change in those circumstances which has an adverse effect on the child and modification of custody would be in the child’s best interest. Sanford v. Arinder, 800 So.2d 1267, 1272 (Miss.Ct.App.2001).

Johnson also stands for the proposition that the chancellor must also take into account the credibility and demeanor of witnesses, and weight of the evidence.

In Weeks v. Weeks, 989 So.2d 408, 411 (Miss. App. 2008), the court affirmed the trial judge’s Abright findings even though the chancellor did not designate which party had “won” each factor. This is because Albright is not a scorecard. It is a template for the court to make findings pertinent to the parents’ relative parenting ability and what is in the best interest of the child. Thus, one or two factors might outweigh all the others combined. For example, the mother’s recent history of psychosis alone may outweigh the fact that she prevails in every other category. But the evidence to support an award of custody based on one or two factors must be strong, and the factors themselves must be substantially related to best interest of the children.

As to how detailed the chancellor’s findings need to be, the COA in Phillips v. Phillips, 45 So.3d 684, 695 (Miss. App. 2010), stated at ¶ 37 that ” … we are not aware of any requirement that the chancellor must acknowledge all of the facts in his analysis of the Albright factors that were presented at trial. The chancellor obviously listened to the testimony at trial — negative and positive for both parties — and made his opinion accordingly.”

MAKING AN END RUN AROUND PIERCE

February 7, 2012 § Leave a comment

In Pierce v. Pierce, 42 So.3d 658 (Miss. App. 2010), the chancellor in a divorce had ordered the husband to pay the wife’s mortgage note until her child by a previous relationship graduated from high school. The COA remanded the case on other grounds, but instructed the chancellor not to tie the payment of the mortgage to any life event of the daughter, since she was not the payor’s offspring. In essence, the order amounted to an improper award of child support.

But what about where the child is the child of the payor? And what about where the payment is not any form of child support?

In Brooks v. Brooks, decided by the COA on December 13, 2011, the payor, Brandon, argued à la Pierce that the trial court had improperly converted payment of the mortgage note into additional child support when the judge tied Brandon’s obligation for mortgage payments to his youngest child’s attainment of the age of 18. He contended that the trial court’s actions were in violation of Pierce.

The COA rejected the argument that Pierce was applicable on the basis that there was no dispute that the child in question was his.

The court went beyond that point to add some significant language:

¶11. We cannot find that the mortgage payment was a form of additional child support. The award in the chancellor’s order was given under the heading, “Equitable Distribution,” and it was ordered after a discussion of the Ferguson factors. The chancellor ordered that when the house is sold, Brandon should receive 60% of the equity, and Dawn should receive 6 40%. The chancellor reasoned that “Brandon’s larger percentage will reflect his payment of debt, taxes[,] and hazard insurance over the next sixteen or so years . . . .” The upkeep and maintenance of the property are Dawn’s responsibility, except for repairs in excess of $1,000, which are the equal responsibility of both parties. Since the mortgage payment was part of the equitable distribution of the assets and Brandon will receive a portion of the equity back when the house is sold, the house payment is not the equivalent of child support. This issue is without merit.

The significance of this language is that it points a direction around Pierce via equitable distribution. If you can persuade your judge to consider mortgage payment as part of the equitable distribution, you can tie the payment to any life event of anyone. This can be helpful in a step-child situation as in Pierce itself, or where there are other child-related obligations not related to children of the parties. And just how do you pitch it? Offer the court through your client’s testimony a balance sheet showing your proposed equitable distribution. The judge might buy it.

CONTRACTING AWAY CHILD SUPPORT ARREARAGES

February 6, 2012 § 1 Comment

If you’ve practiced family law to any appreciable degree, you will recognize this vignette:

Your client, Charlene, has had no success in getting Ron, her deadbeat ex, to pay any child support. The contempt actions you filed just don’t seem to accomplish much except continuance after continuance based on unfulfilled promises and begging, compounded with Charlene’s tender-hearted reluctance to see “the father of my children” jailed.

Just when you’re about at the end of your rope, a ray of hope breaks through the darkness. Charlene sweeps into your office, elated that she and Ron have worked out a deal. Charlene is willing to forget the $17,000 that Ron owes for back child support if Ron will buy Junior a used Toyota pickup (with 136,000 miles) and commence paying current support.

You hastily draft a joint petition and agreed judgment, get the parties to sign, and track down your friendly local chancellor. Sign on the dotted line, judge, you say, and make this problem go away.

What do you think the judge will do? Surely he will approve this, since the parties have agreed, and it will clear up an continuing, chronic course of contumely.

But the judge says no, citing Tanner v. Roland, 598 So.2d 783 (Miss. 1992), in which the parties struck a similar deal, which the Mississippi Supreme Court found to be invalid. Citing Calton v. Calton, 485 So.2d 309, 310-311 (Miss. 1986), the court pointed out that “The child’s right to his parent’s support can not be bargained or contracted away by his parents.” The Tanner court said at page 786, “We have consistently held that child support payments vest in the child as they accrue. Once they have become vested, just as they cannot be contracted away by the parents, they can not be modified or forgiven by the courts.”

Interestingly, Tanner also resulted in the supreme court finding that a five-year-old judgment of that same trial court eliminating an arrearage was void. You just can not do away with a vested arrearage.

Since the Tanner case, the Mississippi legislature created an exception for fathers whose parentage is disestablished. You can read about that statute here.

There is also the situation recognized in Varner v. Varner, in which the court may deem child support to have been “paid” to or for the benefit of the child when the child comes to live with the paying parent for a time by agreement of the parties. The theory is that it would create an unjust enrichment for the parent who did not have the child during that time. In such a case, the trial court still may not forgive the arrearage, but may only declare it to have been “paid” to for for the benefit of the child.

It is the Tanner-Calton line of cases that convinces me that it is improper for parents to contract away the right to future support at all in a property settlement agreement. I’m talking about language to the effect that neither party shall pay child support to the other, or that each party will support the child when the child is with him or her. Is that not bargaining or contracting away the child’s right to support as prescribed by Calton? I believe it is.

A contract to do away with child support is invalid and unenforceable. Even if you skate it past your chancellor, you will face reversal on appeal.

CHILDREN IN THE VORTEX

February 1, 2012 § Leave a comment

The maelstrom of conflict between parents in a divorce or custody battle often catches up the children and dashes them against the same rocks that brought the marriage to destruction. Even the mildest custody conflict can damage children and their relationships with one or both parents, but the injury can be severe when the conflict is intense and where one or both parties bring the children into the vortex. 

As an attorney, you stand in a position to influence your clients to minimize the damage. Here are some thoughts to share with your custody clients:

  • A custody dispute is not about winning or losing. Custody is decided on the basis of what is in the best interest of the children. No matter what the judge decides, his or her decision will be based on what is best for the children. Help your client understand the Albright factors, how they apply in her case, and how to maximize her strong points while minimizing her exposure on the weak points.  
  • Hate and revenge do not help. If your client’s motivation for custody is hate and/or revenge, he will be operating under a considerable disadvantage because (1) those are not positive factors under Albright for custody, and (2) they communicate to the children that they are spoils of war to be won instead of children who are to be loved no matter what the controversy is between the parents.
  • Never allow the children to make the custody decision. Children do not know what is best for them. They are subject to all sorts of influences, the strongest of which appeal to what they believe they want. It is appropriate to ask a mature child’s opinion, but only as input, never as a final decision. The parent or lawyer who tells a child “You will get to decide when you reach x age” is doing the child a great disservice because the law never gives the child a right to finally decide; that decision is always up to the judge. Children who are made to decide often feel that they have betrayed one parent or the other. Making a child decide is putting the child squarely in the middle of the conflict.
  • Children who are placed in the middle learn to manipulate. Parents who put their children in the middle usually find that the children become master manipulaters, playing both sides against each other to gain whatever it is that the child wants or thinks he wants.
  • Putting the children in the middle complicates the case. When the parties put the children in the middle, the resulting conflict spawns contempts, modifications, more discovery about all kinds of perpheral matters, and adds expense, stress, conflict and injured relationships to everyone’s plates.
  • Drop the drama. The only enjoyable thing about a divorce or custody battle for most people is the attention and sympathy they derive from others over the suffering and pain they are having to endure. So when they find their friends’ and family’s attention wandering, they will ramp up the drama to regain the spotlight. That’s self-defeating because it usually takes some kind of negative action to stimulate the other side into conflict. The best and most productive policy is to drop the drama and act like an adult and a caring parent. 
  • Act like an adult. The best behavior you can model for your children is to act like an adult. Treat the other party with the respect he or she deserves as parent of your child. Eschew juvenile name-calling. Turn your back on invitations to argue. Avoid sarcasm and profanity. No threats, veiled or otherwise. Your children are watching and learning from your every move.

Lawyers are in a superior position to advise clients about where to expect to find pitfalls and landmines as they navigate the no-man’s land of child custody litigation. Don’t be reticent when it comes to guiding your clients and even bringing them up short whan they get out of line. That’s part of what you’re there for.

EXEMPTION BY THE ENTIRETY: A “LAWFUL HOCUS-POCUS”

January 31, 2012 § 8 Comments

Remember tenancy by the entirety from law school? It was that peculiar property creature available only to married couples that was in the nature of joint tenancy, but different. Most of us, other than property lawyers I am sure, relegated the concept to that ephemeral legal never-land populated by other seldom-visited concepts such as quasi-contracts, the rule in Shelley’s case, and the statute against mortmain.

Several years ago entireties had somewhat of a resurrection among professionals who realized that the arrangement created a singular advantage: the entirety is exempt from the independent debts of a spouse. So, for instance, a doctor who is sued for malpractice will not have to worry that his joint real property will be subject to a judgment against him if it is owned with his wife by the entireties. Likewise a lawyer who finds herself in the same boat. A wife need not fret that her property owned by the entirety will be subject to her profligate husband’s gambling debts.

A deed by the entireties also insulates the property from the claims of the predecedent’s estate creditors. In fact, the property is not merely insulated, it is exempt, which means in essence that it is no part of the estate at all. This feature is something that you need to take into account when helping your client make estate planning decisions. You can read more about exempt property in estates here and here.

Death of one party or a divorce terminates the entirety.

In March, 2011, the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, Judge Katharine M. Samson, rendered an opinion and order in In re: Vel Marie Dixon, no. 10-51214-KMS, that is about as well-researched, reasoned and helpful an exposition on the topic that you will find anywhere. It’s lengthy, but it’s definitely worth your time to read and digest for the benefit of your clients.

Here is the pertinent part:

As early as 1868, the high court of Mississippi explicitly recognized that the common law concept of estates by the entirety was in force in the state. See Hemingway v. Scales, 42 Miss. 1, 12-13 (1868). FN6. Furthermore, the Mississippi legislature has statutorily preserved the right of a husband and wife to own land in this manner. See Miss. Code. Ann. 89-1-7; Ayers v. Petro, 417 So.2d 912, 916 (Miss. 1982).

FN6. The Mississippi Supreme Court has provided the following commentary regarding the Hemingway decision:

The cases cited in volume 42 Miss. were the opinions of a tribunal appointed by the military satrap and have no binding authority but must be regarded as res judicata. Lusby v. Kansas City, Memphis & Birmingham Railroad Co., 73 Miss. 360, 19 So. 239 (1896). However, the rationale of Hemingway . . . has received full endorsement by this Court on a number of occasions. See Ayers v. Petro, 417 So.2d 912, 914 (Miss.1982); Cuevas v. Cuevas, 191 So.2d 843, 850 (Miss.1966); McDuff v. Beauchamp, 50 Miss. 531, 535 (1874).

Newton v. Long (In re Estate of Childress), 588 So.2d 192, 195 n.4 (Miss. 1991).

An estate by entirety is a peculiar type of institution, which may only exist between a husband and wife. See Ayers, 417 So.2d at 913-14. Although an estate by entirety is similar to a joint tenancy, the Mississippi Supreme Court has emphasized that there are some fundamental differences between the two types of estates.

The unities of time, title, interest, and possession are common to both [a joint tenancy and an estate by the entirety,] but in an estate by entirety there is an additional unity, namely, that of person. Strictly speaking, a tenancy by entirety is not a joint tenancy but is a sole tenancy, and, while the two estates resemble each other and possess some qualities in common, yet they differ both in form and substance and are distinguishable, and it has been said that the disfavor with which the courts look on joint tenancies does not extend to estates by entirety. The seizin of the tenants distinguishes the two estates, and a marked, and perhaps the principal, distinction lies in the possibility of severance and destruction.

Id. (quoting 41 C.J.S., Husband and Wife, § 33(b)).

As noted in the quotation above, by virtue of “lawful hocus-pocus,” if a property is granted to a husband and wife as tenants by the entirety, the law treats the property as if it is owned by a third, fictional corporate entity consisting of the combined legal personas of the husband and wife. Hemingway, 42 Miss. at 6 (emphasis in original) (Geo. L. Potter, for the plaintiff in error) FN7; see also Newton v. Long (In re Estate of Childress), 588 So.2d 192, 194-95 (Miss. 1991) (“there is but one estate held by only one ‘person’ –the marriage itself”); In re Barber, 339 B.R. at 592 (“Husband and wife are treated as though they were a corporate entity.”). Each spouse is simultaneously “seised of the whole estate and not an undivided half interest.” Newton, 588 So.2d at 198 (emphasis in original).

FN7. It appears that during the time period when Hemingway was published, it was customary to print the arguments of the parties in the reporter along with the opinion of the Court. Throughout this opinion, the Court has noted, by way of parenthetical, when it is quoting from the printed arguments of counsel, rather than the Court’s official opinion.

Several incidents of this form of estate are established in Mississippi’s case law. For instance, in contrast to a joint tenancy, which may be destroyed by one of the joint tenants conveying his undivided interest to a third party, an estate in entirety “may not be terminated by the unilateral action of [either the husband or wife] because they take by the entireties and not by moieties.”FN8. Ayers, 417 So.2d at 914. Additionally, upon the death of one spouse, the other spouse continues in their possession of the whole estate. See Hemingway, 42 Miss. at 13; see also id. at 7 (nothing accrues to the survivor, he or she takes by virtue of their old title, being all the time seised of the whole estate) (J.Z. George, for the defendant in error). Furthermore:

While the marriage exists, neither husband nor wife can sever this title so as to defeat or prejudice the right of survivorship in the other, and a conveyance executed by only one of them does not pass title. Cuevas v. Cuevas, 191 So.2d 843 (Miss.1966); McDuff v. Beauchamp, 50 Miss. 531 (1874); Hemingway v. Scales, 42 Miss. 1 (1868).

Ayers, 417 So.2d at 914.

FN8. “Moiety” means “[a] half of something (such as an estate),” or, “[a] portion less than half; a small segment.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1026 (8th ed. 2004).

Regarding the question at hand, the Mississippi Supreme Court has never explicitly stated, nor does any Mississippi statute specifically pronounce, that an estate held by the entireties is exempt from process. However, neither an explicit statement by a state supreme court nor a specific state statute is required to satisfy the equirements of 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(3)(B). As long as it is clear from a state’s common law, under the circumstances presented, that process could not be served on the debtor’s property, held as an estate by the entirety, then that property should be exempt from the bankruptcy estate. See 4 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 522.10[3], at 522-85 (Alan N. Resnick & Henry J. Sommer, eds., 16th ed. 2010) (“Property may be recognized as exempt under section 522(b)(3)(B) to the extent it is exempt from process under a state’s common law.”); In re Holland, No. 05-58959, 2009 WL 2971087, at *2 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. Sept. 8, 2009) (the exemption from process need not appear in a state’s exemption statute, nor need it appear in a statute at all; nor must the statute or case law use the specific word exempt). Under Mississippi’s common law, it is clear that Dixon’s homestead would be exempt from process arising out of her unilateral actions, i.e., the debt that she incurred independent of her husband.

Mississippi case law clearly states that in an estate by entirety each spouse simultaneously is seised of the whole estate, that is title, interest and possession, and the Mississippi Supreme Court has emphasized that no action taken by one of the two tenants in entirety can terminate the rights of the other to the full panoply of rights in the estate. See Ayers, 417 So.2d at 913-14; Newton, 588 So.2d at 196. Allowing judgment creditors to execute process against an estate in entirety by virtue of the actions, i.e., the accumulation and non-payment of debt and the associated liability incurred by only one spouse violates these core principles. Accord In re Barber, 339 B.R. at 593. FN9.

FN9. In contrast to the case discussed herein, the Court recognizes that Mississippi’s case law clearlystates that an estate in entirety may be alienated by the joint act of the husband and wife. Thus, if the couple enters into a mortgage and both the husband and wife sign a deed of trust securing that mortgage, on default, the creditor may legitimately seize the collateral, even if it is held by the married couple as a tenancy by the entirety. See Newton, 588 So.2d at 196 (citing McDuff v. Beauchamp, 50 Miss. 531, 535-36 (1874)).

The Hemingway decision provides support for this finding. In Hemingway, one of the two tenants by entirety, the husband, died insolvent. The probate court decreed that the property held in entirety should be sold “for the payment of his debts.” Newton, 588 So.2d at 195 (emphasis added). The Hemingway Court reversed the lower court’s order, finding that the debts of the husband did not give his creditors the right to impinge upon the wife’s right, under the principles of entirety estates, to continue in her possession of the whole estate. Hemingway, 42 Miss. at 7 and 11-13.

The Court also notes that the Hemingway Court specifically found that Mississippi’s statutes of partition do not apply to estates in the entirety. See Hemingway, 42 Miss. at 12; Miss. Code Ann. 11-21-1, et seq.; see also Newton, 588 So.2d at 199 (“Involuntary partition of real property is not available to tenants by the entirety”) (Prather, J., dissenting). This makes sense, as there is no interest attributable to only one spouse which can be seized based on the actions taken and debts owed by that spouse alone. See Newton, 588 So.2d at 198 (“each spouse is seised of the whole estate and not an undivided half interest”). The only interest in an estate in entirety is possessed corporately by the married couple. Id. at 194-95.

The unique immunity enjoyed by tenants in entirety from process arising out of the liabilities incurred by only one spouse certainly could give rise to abuse. However, the Court’s decision today is the natural fruit of entirety principles reaffirmed consistently over the years by the Mississippi Supreme Court. Indeed, the Mississippi Supreme Court has stated that one of the primary purposes of this unique estate is “to protect” one spouse “from the improvidence of the other spousal tenant.” Newton, 588 So.2d at 196 (citing Cuevas v. Cuevas, 191 So.2d 843, 846-47 (Miss. 1966)). FN10. Today’s decision comports with this policy statement. Since it is state law that creates property rights and defines their scope, unless some federal interest requires otherwise, it is generally not the purview of the federal courts to question the purposes or policies underlying such laws. See Cmty. Nat’l Bank and Trust Co. of N.Y. v. Persky (In re Persky), 134 B.R. 81, 87 (Bankr. E.D.N.Y. 1991). Finally, though it does not bear on the present analysis, the Court notes that the finding above is in accord with the findings of the majority of courts that have considered whether or not estates held by the entirety are exempt from process for liabilities and debts incurred through the actions of one spouse. See J.H. Cooper, Interest of Spouse in Estate by Entireties as Subject to Satisfaction of His or Her Individual Debt, 75 A.L.R.2d 1172, §2 (“In a majority of jurisdictions, it has been held that a creditor of an individual spouse cannot reach the spouse’s interest in an entirety estate during the joint lives of the spouses.”). 

FN10. It appears that this policy has some basis in the historical origins of estates by the entirety. If a joint-tenant was convicted of a felony in pre-colonial England, the share of the jointly owned property owned by that particular joint-tenant was forfeited to the King. However, this policy did not extend to a husband and wife holding property by the entirety. No share of the property held in entirety was surrendered to the King upon the individual conviction of either spouse on felony charges. See Hemingway, 42 Miss. at 7 (J.Z. George, for the defendant in error) (citations omitted).

There are practice implications in tenancy by the entirety not only for property lawyers, but also for probate and family practitioners. Do you have some clients who might benefit from such an arrangement?  

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Thanks to Marcus D. Evans, Esq., for providing the Dixon opinion.

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