Michael T. Gerty v. Joesie R. Gerty ( 2020 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2019-CP-01152-SCT
    CONSOLIDATED WITH
    NO. 2017-CP-00828-SCT
    MICHAEL T. GERTY
    v.
    JOESIE R. GERTY
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           05/03/2019
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. JENNIFER T. SCHLOEGEL
    TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS:                      THOMAS WRIGHT TEEL
    JIM HOOD
    JUSTIN L. MATHENY
    ANNA WARD SUKMANN
    M. CHANNING POWELL
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  HARRISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                     MICHAEL T. GERTY (PRO SE)
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                      M. CHANNING POWELL
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                         CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
    DISPOSITION:                                AFFIRMED IN PART AND REMANDED IN
    PART - 06/04/2020
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE RANDOLPH, C.J., COLEMAN AND CHAMBERLIN, JJ.
    RANDOLPH, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    This matter is before the Court, after having been remanded for the reasons set forth
    in the Court’s prior decision in Gerty v. Gerty, 
    265 So. 3d 121
     (Miss. 2018) (Gerty I). On
    remand, the chancellor granted Michael Gerty a divorce from Joesie Gerty on the ground of
    adultery. The chancellor revisited her prior holdings regarding visitation, division of martial
    assets, and alimony. Finding error only regarding the number of months the parties were
    married,1 we affirm as to all other issues and remand for entry of a final judgment consistent
    with this opinion.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2.    Upon remand of Gerty I, the chancellor utilized the existing record, consisting of
    numerous pleadings, motions, responses, exhibits, and five days of trial testimony, and issued
    an amended final judgment of divorce at issue today. The chancellor granted Michael a
    divorce on the grounds of adultery. The chancellor awarded joint legal custody of the minor
    child to both parties but with physical custody granted to Joesie. Michael was awarded
    visitation every first and third weekend, holiday visitation, and one month in the summer.
    ¶3.    The chancellor found that the court was not limited by the parties’ 2013 property-
    settlement agreement (PSA). The chancellor found that the marital assets consisted of the
    Gulfport home,2 the Pass Christian home, the marital portion of Michael’s military
    retirement, and Joesie’s retirement. Each party was granted one-half of the marital assets.
    Based on the factors enumerated in Ferguson v. Ferguson, 
    639 So. 2d 921
     (Miss. 1994), the
    1
    The parties were married on May 7, 2005. Per the record before the chancellor, the
    chancellor selected the date of the first day of trial, December 7, 2015, as the end date of the
    marriage, resulting in 127 months of marriage, not 204 as reflected in the amended judgment
    before us. Whether this was a scrivener’s error or a miscalculation, we know not. We
    remand with instructions for the sole purpose of the chancellor to correct the numerical error
    regarding the months married to 127. Consistent with her findings, the chancellor is
    instructed to amend the length of marriage in the May 3, 2019 final judgment to 127 months.
    2
    The chancellor took judicial notice of the foreclosure of this property.
    2
    parties’ monthly incomes, and the division of marital assets, the chancellor relieved Michael
    of paying alimony.
    ¶4.    Finding that the chancellor properly awarded Michael a divorce on the ground of
    adultery and that the chancellor revisited her prior awards of visitation, division of marital
    assets, and alimony, we affirm the chancellor’s decision, save for the erroneous length of the
    marriage which shall be corrected on remand.
    ISSUES
    I.       Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong, employed the
    wrong legal standard, or abused its power when it declared that it
    would no longer abide by the parties’ property settlement
    agreement.
    II.      Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong, applied the
    wrong legal standard, or erred by awarding Joesie a percentage of
    Michael’s military retirement pay.
    III.     Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong for significantly
    limiting Michael’s summer visitation.
    IV.      Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong or abused its
    power by allowing a clear and unmistakable bias to determine its
    child-custody decision.
    ANALYSIS
    ¶5.    The standard of review in domestic-relations cases is well-settled. Absent manifest
    error, this Court will uphold a chancellor’s decision. Sproles v. Sproles, 
    782 So. 2d 742
    , 746
    (Miss. 2001).
    I.       Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong, employed the
    wrong legal standard, or abused its power when it declared that it
    would no longer abide by the parties’ property settlement
    agreement.
    3
    ¶6.    Because Michael fails to cite any case law, statutory authority, or any authority to
    show how the chancellor erred in this finding, we find that Michael is procedurally barred
    from raising this issue on appeal. See Touchstone v. Touchstone, 
    682 So. 2d 374
    , 380 (Miss.
    1996); Ellis v. Ellis, 
    651 So. 2d 1068
    , 1073 (Miss. 1995) (issue procedurally barred on
    appeal because appellant failed to cite authority).
    ¶7.    Notwithstanding the procedural bar, this issue is without merit. In Gerty I, we
    specifically found that the parties’ PSA included the following language:
    It is agreed and understood that this Agreement is not contingent upon a
    divorce [sic] being granted. However, if the parties are granted a divorce on
    any grounds, the parties agree that this Agreement shall be made a part of the
    Judgment and that such Judgment shall not conflict with the terms of the
    Agreement [sic] except to the extent disapproved by the Court [sic] the [sic]
    parties agree that each mutually submits to the personal jurisdiction of the
    Chancery Court of Harrison County, State of Mississippi, so that said Court
    has the power to decide any and all matters and questions concerning the
    dissolution of the parties’ marriage . . . and the division of the parties’
    property and debts.
    Gerty I, 265 So. 3d at 125 (emphasis added). Michael argues that the chancery court’s
    opinion regarding the applicability, vel non, of the PSA was not supported by the record,
    applied a wrong legal standard, and was an abuse of power. But the language of the PSA,
    agreed to by the parties, clearly granted the court the authority to decide any matters
    differently than provided by the PSA. Thus, we affirm as to this issue.
    II.    Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong, applied the
    wrong legal standard, or erred by awarding Joesie a percentage of
    Michael’s military retirement pay.
    4
    ¶8.    The chancellor completed a Ferguson analysis and made a finding that Joesie was
    entitled to a portion of Michael’s military retirement. The chancellor found that the marital
    portion of the Michael’s retirement began on May 7, 2005, and ended on December 7, 2015.
    ¶9.    Michael argues that Joesie is not entitled to his military retirement because the parties
    were not married ten years. See Uniform Services Former Spouses Protection Act (USFSPA),
    
    10 U.S.C. § 1408
     (2012). The chancellor found that the parties’ were married on May 7,
    2005, and utilized the first date of trial, December 7, 2015, as the end date of the marriage.
    The only error committed by the chancellor was the miscalculation of the number of months
    the parties were married. Utilizing her findings of the start and end dates of the marriage, the
    parties were married ten years and seven months, a total of 127 months. On remand, the
    chancellor is instructed to amend her May 3, 2019 final judgment to reflect that the parties
    were married for 127 months.
    ¶10.   Michael also contends that the chancellor’s decision was not consistent with the
    Ferguson factors. The chancellor found that the parties’ marital assets consisted of two
    houses, one of which was in foreclosure, and each party’s retirement. The chancellor
    analyzed each Ferguson factor and equitably divided the martial assets between Michael and
    Joesie. The chancellor made the following finding as to Michael’s military retirement, albeit
    with an erroneous calculation as to the length of marriage:
    Military retirement is not a traditional asset to be divided among the parties;
    rather it acts as a stream of income divided as a percentage. This percentage
    is derived by dividing the number of married military service months by the
    total number of creditable service months. In keeping with its previous
    calculation from the divorce, Michael thus far has served a total of 228 months
    (19 years). The Gertys were married for 204 [sic] months[] of Michael’s active
    5
    military service, leaving a portion of his military retirement as separate
    property. Because Michael has not yet retired, DFAS[3] will arrive at the final
    percentage to be distributed with 204 [sic] months as the numerator over
    Michael’s total months of creditable service as the denominator at the time of
    Michael’s future retirement.
    ....
    The Court recognizes that this [] still results in a deficit for both parties;
    however, the addition of Michael’s military retirement should alleviate this
    deficit to a large degree for Joesie. Michael’s deficit is potentially lower than
    reflected here due to the foreclosure sale. Michael nonetheless has the greater
    deficit. Unfortunately, the parties’ financial situation leaves the Court with few
    options whereby they are both solvent and can therefore only plan for some
    degree of stabilization upon Michael’s retirement.
    The Court also recognizes that the parties’ financial positions have likely
    changed since the entry of its original divorce decree and that new evidence
    may be presented and considered upon proper post-judgment motion4 absent
    a valid objection.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶11.     Although Michael claims that the chancellor’s Ferguson analysis and subsequent
    judgment contained many errors and omissions, we find no error by the chancellor in her
    division of the marital assets or her analysis of the Ferguson factors. We do find that the
    chancellor erred by inserting in her final judgment that the parties were married for 204
    months (or a total of seventeen years). On remand, the chancellor is instructed to correct the
    Final Judgment to reflect that the parties were married 127 months. Her judgment as to the
    division of marital assets and her analysis of the Ferguson factors is affirmed.
    3
    Defense Finance and Accounting Services (DFAS) provides payment services to the
    Department of Defense.
    4
    The docket does not indicate that any post-judgment motions were filed by either
    party.
    6
    III.     Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong for significantly
    limiting Michael’s summer visitation.
    ¶12.     Initially, the PSA allowed Michael two months visitation in the summer. Under this
    Court’s remand instructions, the chancellor reconsidered visitation and found that the parties’
    initial visitation agreement “was not sufficient to address visitation of a child of such a young
    age . . . .”
    ¶13.    Michael argues that a “child’s natural parents ‘are infinitely more capable of devising
    a workable custody plan than are the judges of this state.’” (quoting Cheek v. Ricker, 
    431 So. 2d 1139
    , 1142 (Miss. 1983)). Michael contends that nothing in the chancellor’s Albright5
    analysis supports limiting the minor child’s time with his father. Although neither Joesie nor
    Michael requested a modification of the visitation arrangement in the PSA, the chancellor
    was instructed to revisit visitation, and she has wide discretion in her decision.
    Visitation and restrictions placed upon it are within the discretion of the
    chancery court. Newsom v. Newsom, 
    557 So. 2d 511
    , 517 (Miss. 1990); Clark
    v. Myrick, 
    523 So. 2d 79
    , 83 (Miss. 1988); Cheek v. Ricker, 
    431 So. 2d 1139
    ,
    1146 (Miss. 1983). Where a chancellor has made factual findings on the matter
    of visitation, this Court will not disturb those findings unless [the chancellor’s]
    findings are not supported by substantial credible evidence, [the chancellor]
    has committed manifest error, or [the chancellor] has applied the erroneous
    legal standard. Bredemeier v. Jackson, 
    689 So. 2d 770
    , 775 (Miss. 1997).
    However, while being attentive to the rights of a non-custodial parent, [the
    chancellor] must keep the best interest of the child as [the] paramount
    concern. Harrington v. Harrington, 
    648 So. 2d 543
    , 545 (Miss. 1994).
    Christian v. Wheat, 
    876 So. 2d 341
    , 345 (Miss. 2004). In reviewing a chancellor’s factual
    determinations, we may not “arbitrarily substitute our judgment for that of the chancellor
    who is in the best position to evaluate all factors relating to the best interest of the child.”
    5
    Albright v. Albright, 
    437 So. 2d 1003
     (Miss. 1983).
    7
    Tucker v. Tucker, 
    453 So. 2d 1294
    , 1296 (Miss. 1984) (internal quotation mark omitted)
    (quoting Yates v. Yates, 
    284 So. 2d 46
    , 47 (Miss. 1973)).
    ¶14.   The chancellor found that it was not in the best interest of a child the minor child’s
    age to be apart from the custodial parent for two months. Her finding including the following
    language:
    Following the parties divorce trial, the Court conducted a second, more
    comprehensive Albright analysis. As a result of that analysis, with the implicit
    understanding that roughly three years had passed since the parties’ initial
    agreement, that the child was then newly enrolled in elementary school, and
    that the parties’ agreement was no longer workable or in the best interest of the
    child, the Court entered a visitation schedule which differed somewhat from
    the temporary order. The Court’s Albright analysis was and is the basis for its
    findings and rulings on the matter of visitation. To clarify its position, the
    Court finds it is not in the best interest of a young child to spend two
    consecutive months away from his primary custodial parent. For that reason,
    the Court did not grant Michael a two-month summer visitation period . . . .
    Michael was granted visitation every first and third weekend, visitation during the holidays,
    and one month during the summer. The chancellor further found
    The Court hereby slightly alters its summer visitation award by adding
    [that] Michael may be awarded the entire months of June and July for summer
    visitation upon the child’s attainment of age twelve (12) years; provided that
    the child is in agreement. If the child’s desires are contrary to the father’s, the
    visitation schedule shall remain as previously awarded, i.e., limited to either
    the month of June or the month of July. Additionally, the parties may mutually
    agree to alter the visitation schedule at any time they wish to do so.
    ¶15.   The chancellor’s findings were supported by substantial evidence and were not
    manifestly in error. Thus, we affirm the chancellor as to this issue.
    IV.    Whether the chancery court was manifestly wrong or abused its
    power by allowing a clear and unmistakable bias to determine its
    child-custody decision.
    8
    ¶16.   Throughout his brief, Michael makes references to chancellor’s bias against him. His
    fourth assignment of error is duplicative of his prior arguments that the chancellor “ignored
    evidence, ignored testimony, ignored the law, invented new legal standards, and changed the
    law in order to reach a conclusion desired by the chancery court.” But Michael added to his
    argument that he “challenge[s] this court to review and comment on the Chancery Court’s
    Albright analysis.”
    ¶17.   This Court reviewed the chancellor’s Albright analysis as to custody of the minor
    child. We affirmed the chancellor’s judgment as to custody and child support. Gerty I, 265
    So. 3d at 124. Because this issue was correctly decided in Gerty I, this Court gave no
    instruction to the chancellor to review this issue further on remand.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶18.   After a careful review and analysis during the trial and on remand of an unusual set
    of circumstances, the chancellor considered the best interests of the child, and her findings
    were neither manifestly wrong nor clearly erroneous. The chancellor did not apply an
    erroneous legal standard, which would permit this Court to reverse. See Heiter v. Heiter, 
    192 So. 3d 992
    , 994 (Miss. 2016). But this matter is remanded with instruction to the chancellor
    to correct the May 3, 2019 final judgment to reflect that the parties were married 127
    months. We affirm all other aspects of the chancellor’s final judgment of divorce on remand.
    ¶19.   AFFIRMED IN PART AND REMANDED IN PART.
    KITCHENS AND KING, P.JJ., COLEMAN,                             MAXWELL,         BEAM,
    CHAMBERLIN, ISHEE AND GRIFFIS, JJ., CONCUR.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019-CP-01152-SCT

Filed Date: 6/4/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/4/2020