James Allen Morton v. Jolene Anseman ( 1994 )


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  •                           IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 94-CA-01005-SCT
    JAMES ALLEN MORTON
    v.
    JOLENE ANSEMAN
    THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED,
    PURSUANT TO M.R.A.P. 35-A
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                                09/29/94
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                     HON. MELVIN MCCLURE
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                       PANOLA COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                          ROBERT G. ROY
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                           MICHAEL R. WALL
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                              CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
    DISPOSITION:                                     AFFIRMED - 5/29/97
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:                                  6/19/97
    BEFORE SULLIVAN, P.J., PITTMAN AND BANKS, JJ.
    SULLIVAN, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
    After dating for one or two years, Jolene Anseman and James Morton were married on September
    16, 1978. Jolene was pregnant, and at the time of the marriage was having sexual relations with
    James, Troy Bourque, and Randy LeFleur. James knew that Jolene was pregnant when they married,
    and while Jolene never told James about the paternity of the child, James understood that he was the
    father. He testified that he would not have married Jolene had he known that the baby was not his or
    that Jolene had been having sexual relations with other men. Troy Bourque testified that Jolene told
    him that he was the child's father, but that Jolene did not tell James. Jolene testified that she told Troy
    that the child was James's and that she never told James that the child was not his. The child,
    Brandon Morton, was born on April 24, 1979. Three months later, James's brother told him that
    Brandon was not James's son. James testified that the first knowledge he had of Jolene's relationship
    with Troy Bourque was in the summer of 1991 when Brandon told him that Jolene had taken him to
    visit his "real father." James testified that he still believed that Brandon was his son until blood tests
    conducted in December of 1993 revealed that neither James nor Troy was Brandon's father.
    On March 25, 1981, Jolene gave birth to another son, Josh. A DNA test conducted in December of
    1993 revealed that neither James nor Troy Bourque was Josh's father. Jolene testified that Timothy
    Drew Robinson was Josh's father, but no blood test had been conducted to determine this fact.
    Again, James testified that although he suspected that Jolene was not faithful to him, he believed
    Jolene when she told him that both Brandon and Josh were his sons until the blood tests were
    conducted in 1993. James is named as the father on both Brandon's and Josh's birth certificates, and
    he always treated the boys as if they were his own and held himself out to be their father.
    Jolene and James were divorced on January 12, 1984, upon grounds of irreconcilable differences, and
    James was required under the divorce decree to pay Jolene $200 per month in child support. On July
    14, 1986, Jolene filed a petition for citation of contempt against James for failure to keep up the child
    support payments. The chancellor held James in contempt and ordered him to pay the arrearage and
    attorneys' fees, totaling $2,400 plus court costs. After the contempt proceedings, Brandon and Josh,
    and sometimes Jolene, would live with James for periods of time, although testimony differed as to
    the dates and lengths of stays. James testified that while Jolene lived with him they agreed that he
    would pay her monthly car note in the amount of $153.43 and the $2,000 down payment in lieu of
    child support payments. James's mother testified that James would send her the money for the car
    payments and that she would pay the bank. Jolene testified that she paid the $2,000 car down
    payment, that she and James made car payments together, and that James was required in their
    separation agreement to assist her in buying a car. In fact, the separation agreement stated that James
    would make one-half of Jolene's monthly car payments.
    On July 13, 1993, Jolene filed another petition for citation of contempt claiming that James owed her
    $13,000 in back child support payments, because he had not made a payment since January of 1988.
    That left a total of $16,000 unpaid at the time of trial. The petition for citation of contempt was
    consolidated with James's complaint for annulment and motion for relief from the divorce judgment.
    Based upon the above evidence, Judge McClure ordered that James be relieved of future child
    support obligation, that James pay the $16,000 in child support arrearage plus $2,685 in attorneys'
    fees, and that the annulment be denied. It is from this judgment that James appeals to this Court.
    STATEMENT OF THE LAW
    Standard of Review
    "This Court will not disturb the chancellor's opinion when supported by substantial evidence unless
    the chancellor abused his discretion, was manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous or an erroneous legal
    standard was applied." Holloman v. Holloman, So.2d , 
    1996 WL 529540
     (Miss.) (citations omitted)
    .
    I.
    THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED MANIFEST ERROR IN DENYING JAMES
    MORTON'S PETITION FOR ANNULMENT.
    James first argues that he should have been awarded an annulment, because his consent to the
    marriage was obtained by fraud. He contends that Jolene intentionally lied to him about the paternity
    of her sons and that he would have never married Jolene if he had known that he was not Brandon's
    father. James asserts that this fraud defeated the essence of the marriage contract, that he never
    ratified the fraud, and that he should therefore be granted an annulment.
    
    Miss. Code Ann. § 93-7-3
    (d) allows annulment of a marriage when the consent of either party was
    obtained by fraud. In such a case, the marriage is void from the time of a court declaring its nullity. A
    suit for annulment under § 97-7-3(d) must be brought within six months after the fraud is or should
    have been discovered. 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 93-7-3
    .
    James knew that Jolene was pregnant when they were married, but he says that believed that the child
    was his. In his testimony at trial, James stated that he believed that Brandon and Josh were his sons
    until the paternity tests in December of 1993. However, the evidence showed that James's brother
    told him that Brandon was not his son three months after Brandon was born. Then, in the summer of
    1991, James was aware that Brandon was telling people that his real father was Troy Bourque. James
    also admitted that while they were still married, he suspected that Jolene was not faithful to him.
    James knew or should have known that Brandon was not his son shortly after his birth, or at least in
    1991 when Brandon himself made James aware of that fact. If he wanted an annulment, James should
    have filed suit within six months of his brother's or Brandon's announcement, when Jolene's alleged
    fraud became apparent. Instead, James waited until March 10, 1994, well after the six-month deadline
    prescribed in § 93-7-3. As a result, James's petition for annulment is time-barred.
    To show fraud, James would have to prove that Jolene intentionally perverted the truth. The evidence
    showed that Jolene herself could not be sure who Brandon's father was when she and James were
    married. Jolene testified that, in her heart, she believed that James was Brandon's father, and both
    parties agreed that Jolene never told James anything about Brandon's paternity. Based upon this
    evidence, the chancellor determined that James did not meet his burden of proof to show that Jolene
    perpetrated a fraud regarding Brandon's paternity. The chancellor did not err in refusing to grant
    James an annulment, because his petition was time-barred, and because he failed to meet his burden
    of proof in showing that his consent to the marriage was obtained by fraud.
    II.
    THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED MANIFEST ERROR IN DENYING JAMES
    MORTON'S MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM THE JUDGMENT PURSUANT TO RULE 60
    OF THE MISSISSIPPI RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE.
    James next argues that he is entitled to relief under M.R.C.P. 60 from the divorce judgment requiring
    him to pay child support. Rule 60 in pertinent part reads:
    (b) Mistakes; Inadvertence; Newly Discovered Evidence; Fraud, etc. On motion and upon such
    terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or his legal representative from a final judgment,
    order, or proceeding for the following reasons:
    (1) fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party;
    (2) accident or mistake;
    (3) newly discovered evidence which by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to
    move for a new trial under Rule 59(b);
    (4) the judgment is void;
    (5) the judgment has been satisfied, released, or discharged, or a prior judgment upon which it
    is based has been reversed or otherwise vacated, or it is no longer equitable that the judgment
    should have prospective application;
    (6) any other reason justifying relief from the judgment.
    The motion shall be made within a reasonable time, and for reasons (1), (2) and (3) not more
    than six months after the judgment, order, or proceeding was entered or taken.
    M.R.C.P. 60. James contends that the divorce judgment would never have been executed if Jolene
    had been truthful about the paternity of her sons. As a result, James argues, the judgment is void,
    because it is based upon fraud and should be set aside.
    While James requested relief under Rule 60(b)(4) and (6), the essence of his argument is that Jolene
    committed fraud, which is addressed in Rule 60(b)(1). Again, the chancellor found that James failed
    to meet his burden of proof showing any fraud perpetrated by Jolene. Testimony differed regarding
    Jolene's knowledge about her sons' paternity, and both Jolene and James agreed that Jolene told
    James nothing about Brandon's paternity before their marriage. The chancellor cannot be said to have
    committed manifest error in holding that the weight of the evidence did not support a finding of
    fraud. In the absence of sufficient proof of fraud, James's argument for relief under Rule 60(b)(1) is
    meritless. Furthermore, a Rule 60(b)(1) motion alleging fraud, misrepresentation, or misconduct must
    be filed within six months of the judgment's entry. James and Jolene's divorce judgment was entered
    on January 12, 1984, so James's motion filed on March 10, 1994 was time-barred.
    James attempts to get around the six-month time limit by arguing that he is entitled to relief under
    Rule 60(b)(4) and (6). Allowing relief under Rule 60(b)(4) would require proof that the divorce
    judgment was void due to fraud. As previously stated, James failed to meet his burden of proof on
    this issue, so Rule 60(b)(4) affords him no relief. Rule 60(b)(6) allows a judgment to be set aside for
    any other justifiable reason. Since James's argument of fraud is specifically outlined in Rule 60(b)(1),
    Rule 60(b)(6) does not apply here.
    It is well-settled in Mississippi that an award of child support is for the benefit of the child, and that
    an obligation of child support vests in the child so that past-due payments cannot be forgiven by any
    court. Williams v. Rembert, 
    654 So.2d 26
    , 29 (Miss. 1995) (citing Department of Human Services
    v. Rains, 
    626 So.2d 136
    , 138 (Miss. 1993)). "There are clear limitations to the discretionary powers
    of a trial judge, and one such limitation is that a judge may not utilize the rules of procedure to do
    that which the substantive law of this State forbids him to do." McDonald v. McDonald, 
    683 So.2d 929
    , 934 (Miss. 1996) (reversing chancellor's modification of nonmodifiable lump sum alimony under
    Rule 60(b)(6)). Clearly, the chancellor in this case did not have the authority to forgive the past-due
    child support payments that James owed through application of Rule 60.
    III.
    JOLENE MORTON SHOULD HAVE BEEN ESTOPPED FROM CLAIMING THAT
    JAMES MORTON WAS IN CONTEMPT FOR HAVING FAILED TO PAY CHILD
    SUPPORT PURSUANT TO THE DIVORCE DECREE, BECAUSE SHE HAD
    PERPETRATED A FRAUD UPON THE COURT IN PROCURING THE DECREE, AND
    DID NOT COME INTO COURT WITH CLEAN HANDS.
    James's third argument is simply that Jolene was barred under the clean hands doctrine from receiving
    relief in her petition for citation of contempt, because she obtained the divorce decree through fraud.
    The clean hands doctrine prevents a complaining party from obtaining equitable relief in court when
    he is guilty of willful misconduct in the transaction at issue. Calcote v. Calcote, 
    583 So.2d 197
    , 199-
    200 (Miss. 1991) (citing V.A. Griffith, Mississippi Chancery Practice § 42 (1950)). Here, James
    asserts that Jolene was guilty of fraud in obtaining the divorce decree ordering child support
    payments, because she indicated in the divorce proceedings that both Josh and Brandon were "born
    of the marriage." As a result, James argues that Jolene is barred by the clean hands doctrine from
    bringing her petition for citation of contempt for failure to make child support payments. However,
    the chancellor did not err in finding that James failed to meet his burden of proof to show any fraud,
    so the clean hands doctrine does not apply to this case. This assignment of error is without merit.
    IV.
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING JAMES MORTON TO BE IN WILLFUL
    CONTEMPT, AND IN FAILING TO GIVE HIM CREDIT TOWARD HIS CHILD
    SUPPORT OBLIGATION FOR THE PERIOD OF TIME WHEN THE CHILDREN WERE
    IN HIS HOME.
    James argues in the alternative that he should at least have been given credit in the trial court's
    judgment for the months during which Brandon and Josh were living with him. He contends that he
    should not be required to pay the child support during any time in which Jolene and the children lived
    with him, because he provided them with shelter, food, clothing, and other necessities during those
    times.
    It is true that this Court has previously allowed reduction of past-due child support payments when it
    was shown that the child lived with the noncustodial father. Burkett v. Burkett, 
    537 So.2d 443
    , 445-
    47 (Miss. 1989). "That is, he is entitled to credit for the amount of support directly given to the child
    when the custodial parent sues for any arrearage." 
    Id.
     at 446 (citing Alexander v. Alexander, 
    494 So.2d 365
     (Miss.1986)). However, this Court determined that the chancellor acted within his
    discretionary authority in allowing the credit. Id. at 445-47.
    In this case, the chancellor refused to allow any credit on the arrearage for the time that the children
    lived with James or for the car payments. James was required to provide Jolene with one-half of her
    car payments in their divorce decree, so he should not be given credit toward his child support
    obligation for the car payments. It was within the discretion of the chancellor to award James a credit
    for the time that Brandon and Josh lived with him while attending school in Batesville, as evidenced
    by their school records, or for any other period that the chancellor found to have been proven.
    However, based upon the conflicting testimony regarding the length of time Brandon and Josh lived
    with James, and the lack of evidence regarding the amount of money that James spent to support the
    children during such times, it cannot be said that the chancellor abused his discretion in refusing to
    give James credit toward his child support arrearage. As a result, no reversible error occurred.
    CONCLUSION
    The chancellor in this case did not err in determining that James failed to meet his burden of proof to
    show that Jolene perpetrated any fraud. Without a showing of fraud, James's arguments for an
    annulment, for relief from the divorce judgment under Rule 60, and for application of the clean hands
    doctrine all fail. Similarly, James failed to offer any solid proof of the time during which Brandon and
    Josh lived with him, so the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in refusing to grant James credit
    toward his child support arrearage. Because the chancellor based his decision upon substantial
    evidence with no manifest error, we affirm his decision on appeal.
    AFFIRMED.
    PRATHER, P.J., PITTMAN, BANKS, ROBERTS, SMITH AND MILLS, JJ., CONCUR. DAN
    LEE, C.J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. McRAE, J., NOT
    PARTICIPATING.
    DAN LEE, CHIEF JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
    Because I fear the judicial system has been unjustly used and manipulated by an untruthful litigant, I
    feel compelled to dissent. This manipulation was perpetuated by the lower court's denial of James
    Allen Morton's Petition for Annulment of a fraudulently induced marriage and resulting order of child
    support in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, and has resulted in a fraud being
    perpetrated upon James, and, even more crucial, upon the court system itself. While I have great
    sympathy for the needs of the children involved in this case and any harm that might come to them,
    nothing can match the harm already caused by the manipulation and untruthfulness of their mother,
    Jolene. However, such injustice as evinced by the facts of this case cannot remain unchallenged.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    On July 13, 1993, Jolene Anseman (Jolene) filed a Complaint for Citation for Contempt against her
    ex-husband, James, claiming that he was in arrears on child support in the amount of some $13,000.
    James filed his Complaint for Annulment of Marriage on March 10, 1994, urging that his marriage to
    Jolene be annulled on the basis of her fraudulent misrepresentation regarding the paternity of her
    children. On that same day, James filed a motion seeking relief from the divorce decree requiring him
    to pay $200 per month in child support. The motion also requested that the Complaint for Citation
    for Contempt and the Complaint for Annulment of Marriage, as well as the motion for relief, be
    consolidated.
    On March 17, 1994, a hearing was held on the issue of consolidation. All three claims were
    consolidated and Troy Bourque, because he was an out-of-state witness, testified following the
    consolidation hearing. All other testimony was heard on September 7, 1994. The chancellor held
    James in contempt of court and required him to pay the past-due child support of some $16,000 in
    monthly installments of $200, attorneys' fees of $2,685, and court costs. The chancellor refused to
    grant James an annulment, but ordered that James should be relieved from future child support
    obligations.
    STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
    James and Jolene were married on September 16, 1978. Jolene was pregnant at the time and was
    having sexual relations with James, Troy Bourque, and Randy LeFleur. Jolene believed the child she
    was carrying was fathered by Troy Bourque, but allowed James to conclude that he, James, was the
    child's father. James, relying upon that belief, that, married Jolene. The child, B.M., was born on
    April 24, 1979. On March 25, 1981, Jolene gave birth to a second child, J.M. Jolene admitted that
    Timothy Drew Robinson was, in fact, J.M.'s father. James was listed as father on both children's birth
    certificates. He always treated them as if they were his own, led to that belief by Jolene, and held
    himself out to be their father.
    On January 12, 1984, James and Jolene were divorced upon the grounds of irreconcilable differences.
    Jolene maintained in her petition for divorce that James was the father of the children, knowing full
    well that they were not his. As a result of the divorce, James was ordered to pay $200 per month in
    child support. James testified that he agreed to pay the child support because he believed that he was
    the children's father and wanted to provide support for them.
    In July 1993, Jolene filed her second Complaint for Citation for Contempt (the first having been filed
    in 1986) claiming that James owed some $13,000 in back child-support payments. In December,
    1993, James, Jolene, both children, and Troy Bourque had blood tests performed to determine the
    paternity of the two children. The test results, which were released in January, 1994, revealed that
    James was not the father of the children. Troy Bourque was also eliminated as the natural father of
    the children.
    On March 10,1994, within three months of receiving the results of the blood test, James filed his
    Complaint for Annulment of Marriage and a Motion for Relief from Judgment and to Consolidate
    Actions. The claims were consolidated and heard before the chancellor.
    Troy Bourque testified that he had been having sexual relations with Jolene during the time she
    conceived B.M. He testified that Jolene was engaged to James at that point. Additionally Bourque
    stated in testimony that Jolene, at the time her pregnancy with B.M., told him that he was the father
    of the child, not James.
    James testified that he knew that Jolene was pregnant when they got married, but that she led him to
    believe that the child was his. He further stated that he would not have married Jolene had he known
    that he was not the father of the child she was carrying. According to James' testimony, three months
    after B.M. was born, James' brother told him he was not the child's father. James testified that he
    confronted Jolene and her mother with that statement, and both Jolene and her mother insisted that
    James was the father of the child. The record of James' testimony establishes that each time he spoke
    to Jolene regarding the paternity of the B.M., she insisted that he was the natural father. As to J.M.,
    James stated that he did not inquire as to who fathered J.M., and Jolene never told him. Admitting
    that he suspected that Jolene was "sleeping around" on him during the marriage and hearing rumors
    regarding the paternity of B.M., James maintained that he believed Jolene's assertion that he was the
    child's father. James testified that he did not know that he was not the children's father until he
    received the results of the blood tests in January, 1994.
    Jolene testified that, at the time she married James, she was not sure of the paternity of the child she
    was carrying. She acknowledged that she was having sex with Bourque and Randy LaFleur, as well
    as James, during the period of time surrounding the conception of B.M. Jolene testified that, at that
    point in time, she believed in her heart that James was the child's father, but admitted that she knew
    she had been dishonest from the beginning of the marriage because she did not tell James that B.M.
    was not his child, leading him to believe that the child was his. As to discussions with James
    regarding the child, she conceded that she had not told James that she knew that he was not the
    father of B.M. When Jolene became pregnant with J.M., she did not, according to her testimony, tell
    James that there was no way that he could be the father of the child.
    On cross-examination, Jolene conceded that she had lied during the divorce proceedings, claiming
    that James was the natural father of the children, knowing all the while that they were not his. Jolene
    acknowledged that in the first contempt action she avowed that James was the father of the children.
    Jolene's persistent and pervasive lying regarding the paternity of her children is demonstrated by the
    following excerpt from her cross-examination:
    Q. When you filed for a divorce, did you not state in your pleadings, when you filed
    proceedings in this cause, did you not state that Jimmy Morton was the father of those two
    children?
    A. Yes, I stated that he was the father.
    Q. That was not true, was it?
    A. I stated that [he] was the father.
    Q. You stated that [B.M.] and [J.M.]--that he was the father of both [B.M.] and [J.M.] in your
    divorce, did you not?
    A. Yes.
    Q. And, you knew he was not, is that true?
    A. Of [J.M.]
    Q. You just stated earlier that you knew right after he was born that he was not the father,
    before the divorce. So, isn't it true that you knew at the time of the divorce he was not the
    father? You just stated that he wasn't.
    A. Yes.
    Q. Wasn't that a lie?
    A. That was a lie.
    Q. Didn't you state in your first citation for contempt back in 1986 that he was the father of
    both children?
    A. I stated that, yes.
    Q. Was that a lie?
    A. Yes.
    As evidenced by this testimony, Jolene lied not only to James, but to the court as well.
    The chancellor held that James was entitled to an order relieving him of his current support
    obligation, but that he was not entitled to annulment, nor entitled to relief from the decree ordering
    past-due child support. A judgment in the amount of $16,000 for past-due child support to Jolene,
    plus payment of her attorney's fees of $2,685, was entered against James Morton, for a total
    judgment of $18,685 plus eight percent interest from the date of the judgment forward. The judgment
    was ordered to be paid at the rate of $200 per month, and a withholding order immediately entered.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    "This Court will not disturb the chancellor's opinion when supported by substantial evidence unless
    the chancellor abused his discretion, was manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous or an erroneous legal
    standard was applied." Holloman v. Holloman, 
    691 So. 2d 897
    , 898 (Miss. 1996) (citations
    omitted).
    DISCUSSION OF THE LAW
    Three issues need to be addressed with respect to the majority opinion and the facts presented by the
    case sub judice. First, James did, indeed, file his Complaint for Annulment of Marriage within the six-
    month time-frame specified by Mississippi Code Annotated § 93-7-39; therefore his complaint is not
    time barred. Second, James did prove that Jolene induced him into the marriage by fraud, thereby
    warranting the granting of his requested annulment. Third, Jolene did not come into this action with
    clean hands, therefore equity demands that the unjust result in the instant case be rectified.
    I. JAMES FILED HIS COMPLAINT FOR ANNULMENT OF MARRIAGE WITHIN
    THE SIX-MONTH TIME-FRAME SPECIFIED BY MISSISSIPPI CODE
    ANNOTATED § 93-7-3.
    Mississippi Code Annotated § 93-7-3 specifies that a suit for annulment must be brought within six
    months after the fraud is discovered or should have been discovered. In the instant case, James
    testified that he believed that B.M. and J.M. were his sons until the results of paternity tests were
    received in January, 1994. The record shows that, prior to the blood tests, the only knowledge James
    had respecting the true paternity of the two children was by way of remarks made by his brother
    shortly after B.M.'s birth and by B.M. some years later. Jolene's consistent and emphatic response to
    James' inquiries about the rumors was that he was the natural father. James was faced with the
    Hobson's choice of believing mere rumor and speculation or believing his wife. Even the court papers
    filed by Jolene, later acknowledged in her testimony to be fraudulent, reinforced James' belief that he
    was the children's natural father. Not until he received the results of the blood test in January,
    1994, did James know that B.M. and J.M. were not his children.
    Full knowledge of the facts constituting fraud cannot be inferred or deduced from mere suspicion or
    rumor. Rabie v Rabie, 
    115 Cal. Rptr. 594
    , 597 (Cal. Ct. App. 1974) ("Suspicion, or a belief founded
    upon inconclusive circumstances, is not 'full knowledge of the facts constituting the fraud' . . ."). The
    only knowledge which James could have or should have had respecting the true paternity of B.M.
    and J.M., which was not pure conjecture and sheer speculation on his part, came from the blood tests
    performed in December, 1993, and the release of the results in January, 1994. That is the point in
    time when James discovered the fraud perpetrated upon him by Jolene. On March 10, 1996, well
    within the six-month time limitation mandated by Mississippi Code Annotated § 93-7-3, James filed
    his action requesting the annulment of his marriage. His complaint was, therefore, not time barred.
    II. JAMES PROVED BY CLEAR AND CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT HIS
    CONSENT TO THE MARRIAGE WAS OBTAINED BY FRAUD ON THE PART OF
    JOLENE, THEREFORE, PURSUANT TO MISSISSIPPI CODE ANNOTATED § 93-7-
    3, JAMES' AND JOLENE'S MARRIAGE SHOULD HAVE BEEN DECLARED A
    NULLITY AB INITIO.
    The elements of fraud are: (1) a representation; (2) its falsity; (3) its materiality; (4) the speaker's
    knowledge of its falsity or ignorance of its truth; (5) the speaker's intent that the representation
    should be acted upon by the hearer and in the manner reasonably contemplated; (6) the hearer's
    ignorance of its falsity; (7) the hearer's reliance on the representation's truth; (8) the hearer's right to
    rely thereon; and (9) the hearer's consequent and proximate injury. Allen v. MacTools, 
    671 So. 2d 636
    , 642 (Miss. 1996). Conditions of mind, such as intent and malice, are required to be averred only
    generally. Benson v. Hall, 
    339 So.2d 570
     (Miss.1976); Edmonds v. Delta Democrat Pub. Co., 
    230 Miss. 583
    , 
    93 So.2d 171
     (1957). Allen, 
    671 So. 2d 636
    , 642; see also Stringfellow v. Stringfellow,
    
    451 So. 2d 219
    , 221 (Miss. 1984); Gardner v. State, 
    235 Miss. 119
    , 
    108 So. 2d 592
     (1959). In the
    instant case, the burden of proving fraud is upon James. Stringfellow, 451 So. 2d at 221.
    The following facts, evidenced by the testimony at trial, demonstrate that James carried his burden of
    proof respecting fraud:
    (1) At the time of the marriage, Jolene was pregnant. She knew the child's father was possibly
    another man, but represented to James that the child was his (a clear misrepresentation of a
    material fact of which she had knowledge and of which James was ignorant).
    (2) James relied upon her representation and entered into the marriage. Otherwise he would not
    have consented to the marriage.
    (3) Jolene became pregnant again, and knowing that James was not the father of that child,
    allowed him to believe that he was the child's father.
    (4) Jolene continued to represent to James that he was the father of both children, while telling
    others that the children were not his.
    (5) James and Jolene were divorced on January 12, 1984 upon grounds of irreconcilable
    differences. Jolene represented in her court filings that James was the father of both B.M. and
    J.M.
    (6) In July, 1993, Jolene filed a contempt complaint because James was in arrears for the court-
    ordered child support payments, again representing to James, and the court, that he was the
    father of the two children.
    (7) In December, 1993, Jolene, James, Troy Bourque, and both children submitted to blood
    tests for the purpose of determining paternity. Results of the tests, released in January, 1994,
    showed that neither James nor Troy was the father of either child.
    (8) In March, 1994, three months after the results of the blood tests were known, James filed
    his Complaint for Annulment of Marriage and Motion for Relief from Judgment.
    The injury to James is clear -- he paid child support over the years for children of whom he was not
    the father, but whom Jolene consistently held out as his children. Additionally, he was ordered by the
    court to pay the child support arrearage at a rate of $200 per month.
    Clearly, James has proved by clear and convincing evidence that he entered into the marriage as a
    result of the fraud perpetrated by Jolene. The chancellor should have granted James' request for the
    annulment of the marriage and vacated the order of January, 1984, mandating the payment of child
    support by James. The ruling of the chancellor should, therefore, be reversed and remanded as to this
    issue.
    III. JOLENE DID NOT ENTER THIS ACTION WITH "CLEAN HANDS,"
    THEREFORE, THE UNJUST OUTCOME OF THE INSTANT CASE MUST BE
    RECTIFIED.
    In Brennan v. Brennan, 
    605 So. 2d 749
    , 752 (Miss. 1992), we emphatically stated:
    "[h]e who comes into equity must come with clean hands." Thigpen v. Kennedy, 
    238 So. 2d 744
    , 746 (Miss. 1970).
    O'Neill v. O'Neill, 
    551 So. 2d 228
    , 233 (Miss. 1989) holds that "[t]he meaning of this maxim is
    to declare that 'no person as a complaining party can have the aid of a court of equity when his
    conduct with respect to the transaction in question has been characterized by wilful inequity . . .
    .'" (quoting V. A. Griffith, Mississippi Chancery Practice, § 42 (2d ed. 1950).
    In Thigpen, supra, the Court approved the following description of the maxim in the words of
    Pomeroy:
    "[W]henever a party, who, as actor, seeks to set the judicial machinery in motion and obtain
    some remedy, has violated conscience, or good faith, or other equitable principle, in his prior
    conduct, then the doors of the court will be shut against him in limine; the court will refuse to
    interfere on his behalf, to acknowledge his right, or to award him any remedy." Vol. 1
    Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, 4th Ed., Section 397, page 738.
    Thigpen v. Kennedy, 
    238 So. 2d 744
    , 746 (Miss. 1970) (quoting from Patterson v. Koernor,
    
    220 Miss. 590
    , 594, 595, 
    71 So. 2d 464
    , 466 (1954)).
    The maxim should be applied by the court sua sponte where it is shown to be applicable.
    Pearson v. Pearson, 
    458 So. 2d 711
    , 713 (Miss. 1984); Cole v. Hood, 
    371 So. 2d 861
    , 864
    (Miss. 1979); Thigpen, supra, 238 So. 2d at 746-747 (citing Griffith, § 42).
    Brennan, 605 So 2d. at 752.
    In the instant case, the majority asserts that, because the chancellor did not make a finding of fraud in
    the case sub judice, the issue of "clean hands" is settled. What the majority fails to realize is that the
    concept of "clean hands" is not dependant upon the proof of fraud, but is tied to the violation of a
    principle of equity, such as breach of good faith or conscience in the litigant's prior conduct.
    In the instant case, the record is rife with evidence of Jolene's violation of the principles of equity.
    First, at the very least, she misrepresented material facts to James regarding the paternity of B.M. and
    J.M., and continued this ruse up until the paternity tests confirmed that James was not the natural
    father. Second, and more egregious, she admitted that she lied to the court on at least four occasions.
    The court's order of child support was based upon fraudulent papers filed by Jolene. In the court
    proceedings in 1986 she continued to lie to the court. Jolene's testimony demonstrates that she lied
    and manipulated the judicial system for financial gain. Equity cannot allow such blatant and bald-
    faced actions to remain unremedied.
    Jolene came into court asking that James be found in contempt because of his arrearage in child
    support payments. The chancellor should not have ruled that James was in contempt. Jolene had
    violated the law of equity by coming into court with unclean hands and should not have been
    afforded the remedy which she sought. Because Jolene perpetrated a fraud, not only upon James, but
    also upon the court, the chancellor's ruling should be reversed and rendered, vacating the order of
    contempt mandating the payment of child support arrearage by James.
    CONCLUSION
    I have great sympathy for the children in the instant case. Nothing in this opinion is meant to
    denigrate or harm them in any way. Jolene's actions, and the blood test results of January, 1994, have
    already caused great harm to the children. The fact remains, however, that the children are now in
    their late teens and almost ready to go out on their own. Beyond that, this case is not about the
    children. This case is about an untruthful litigant subverting and manipulating the court system.
    The chancellor, in his decision in the instant case, has abused his discretion and was manifestly
    wrong. James' claim of fraud was clearly not time barred, as he had no knowledge of the true
    paternity of his children prior to the results of the blood tests released in January, 1994. He filed his
    complaint within the six-month time limitation specified by Mississippi Code Annotated § 93-7-3.
    The chancellor was manifestly wrong because James proved, by clear and convincing evidence, that
    he entered into the marriage with Jolene as a result of the fraud perpetrated upon him by her.
    Additionally and alternatively, the chancellor abused his discretion by not applying the equitable
    doctrine of clean hands. The chancellor should not have used the extraordinary power of the court to
    enforce an order when that order was fraudulently obtained and the one seeking that remedy, in this
    case, Jolene, comes into court without clean hands.
    For the foregoing reasons, I must respectfully dissent.