Kevin B. McCall v. Cynthia C. McCall ( 2019 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2017-CA-01203-COA
    KEVIN B. McCALL                                                          APPELLANT
    v.
    CYNTHIA C. McCALL                                                          APPELLEE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                        07/26/2017
    TRIAL JUDGE:                             HON. DEBBRA K. HALFORD
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:               WALTHALL COUNTY CHANCERY
    COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                 CHAD KENNETH KING
    MATTHEW THOMPSON
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                  MARK R. HOLMES
    ALTON LAMAR WATTS
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                      CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
    TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:                 AFFIRMED: 01/29/2019
    DISPOSITION:
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    GRIFFIS, C.J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.   In 2014, Cynthia and Kevin McCall were divorced on the ground of irreconcilable
    differences. Their property-settlement agreement required Kevin to pay $3,500 per month
    in child support and required Kevin to make an additional lump-sum child-support payment
    of $100,000.
    ¶2.   In October 2016, Kevin filed for modification of his child-support obligation. The
    chancellor determined that Kevin was in arrears on his child-support obligation in the sum
    of $198,205.82. Cynthia responded to the motion and filed a counterclaim, asking the court
    to find Kevin in contempt for his failure to pay his child-support obligation. The chancellor
    denied the modification and found Kevin in contempt of court. The chancellor entered a
    judgment that increased Kevin’s monthly obligation by $1,000 and awarded Cynthia
    attorney’s fees. It is from this judgment that Kevin now appeals.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶3.    Kevin and Cynthia McCall were married for thirteen years. They had two children
    born of the marriage.
    ¶4.    In April 2014, the McCalls were granted a divorce on the ground of irreconcilable
    differences. The McCalls agreed upon, and the chancellor accepted, a property-settlement
    agreement that was signed by both parties.1 In the agreement, Kevin and Cynthia agreed that
    Cynthia would have full legal and physical custody of the children. The agreement also
    provided that Kevin would pay child support in monthly payments of $3,500 and a lump-sum
    payment of $100,000, due on May 15, 2014.
    ¶5.    On June 11, 2014, Cynthia filed a Petition for Citation for Criminal and Civil
    Contempt. In the petition, Cynthia alleged, among other claims, that Kevin McCall had
    failed to pay the lump sum child support payment of $100,000 by May 15, 2014, as agreed.
    ¶6.    On August 6, 2014, Kevin filed a Response to Petition for Citation for Contempt and
    Counter-Petition for Modification of Judgment of Divorce and/or Relief from Judgment
    1
    Just before he signed the property-settlement agreement, Kevin was incarcerated for
    failure to complete discovery. Kevin was released to attend the contempt hearing. Kevin
    stated that he would like to sign the property-settlement agreement to finalize the divorce.
    Kevin stated that he was not pressured to sign the agreement to get out of jail. In this action,
    Kevin does not challenge that he lacked capacity to sign the agreement or that his signature
    was not his voluntary act.
    2
    under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). The chancellor entered an order, dated
    November 7, 2014, that denied Kevin’s Petition for Relief from Judgment under Mississippi
    Rule of Civil Procedure 60 (b). Kevin did not file a timely appeal.
    ¶7.    In April 2015, Kevin and Cynthia were before the court on a contempt motion. In an
    agreed order, Kevin was cited for contempt. Kevin agreed that he was in arrears on monthly
    child-support payments in the sum of $21,955 and the $100,000 lump-sum payment.
    ¶8.    In March 2016, Kevin filed a motion for modification of his child-support obligation.
    He argued that he lost ownership of a sawmill2 he owned in Texas as the basis for his
    material change of circumstances. The chancellor denied the motion and found Kevin in
    contempt of court. Kevin now appeals this judgment.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶9.    In Evans v. Evans, 
    994 So. 2d 765
    , 768 (¶9) (Miss. 2008), the Mississippi Supreme
    Court held that “[d]omestic-relations matters are reviewed under the limited substantial-
    evidence/manifest-error rule. A chancellor’s findings will not be disturbed ‘unless the
    chancellor was manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous or an erroneous legal standard was
    applied.’” (Citations omitted).
    ANALYSIS
    ¶10.   The review of a chancellor’s decision on the modification of child support begins with
    several general statements of applicable law. In Evans, the court ruled that:
    There can be no modification of a child support decree absent a substantial and
    material change in the circumstances of one of the interested parties arising
    2
    During their marriage, Kevin owned a sawmill in Mississippi.
    3
    subsequent to the entry of the decree sought to be modified. The change must
    occur as a result of after-arising circumstances of the parties, not reasonably
    anticipated at the time of the agreement. Some of the factors which may be
    considered in determining whether a material change has taken place include:
    (1) increased needs caused by advanced age and maturity of the
    children; (2) increase in expenses; (3) inflation; (4) the relative
    financial condition and earning capacity of the parties; (5) the
    health and special needs of the child, both physical and
    psychological; (6) the health and special medical needs of the
    parents, both physical and psychological; (7) the necessary
    living expenses of the non-custodial parent; (8) the estimated
    amount of income taxes the respective parties must pay on their
    incomes; (9) the free use of a residence, furnishings, and
    automobile; and (10) such other facts and circumstances that
    bear on the support subject shown by the evidence.
    
    Id. at 770
    (¶16) (citations and internal quotation mark omitted). Also, in Laird v. Blackburn,
    
    788 So. 2d 844
    , 849 (¶8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2001), this Court held:
    Child support is awarded to the custodial parent for the benefit and protection
    of the child. Such benefits belong to the child, and the custodial parent has a
    fiduciary duty to hold them for the use of the child. The obligations vest in the
    child as they accrue, and no court may thereafter modify or forgive them if
    they are not paid. Child support money belongs to the child, not to the
    custodial parent[,] and the custodial parent has no right to the support money
    independent of the child.
    (Citations omitted).
    ¶11.   Kevin’s first issue has two parts. Both challenge the 2014 final judgment of divorce.
    The first part concerns whether the chancellor erred in 2014 by the failure to approve child
    support consistent with the statutory guidelines, Miss. Code Ann. § 43-19-101(1), and failure
    to make the required findings, Miss. Code Ann. § 43-19-101(2). The second part of this
    issue concerns whether the chancellor erred in the award of lump-sum child support.
    ¶12.   The second issue is whether the chancellor erred in the decision to deny Kevin’s
    4
    motion for modification of his child-support obligations.
    1.      Whether the chancellor erred in denying a modification because the
    2014 judgment violated Mississippi Code Annotated section 43-19-101
    or awarded lump-sum child support.
    ¶13.   Kevin did not appeal the 2014 divorce. Instead, he uses the motion for modification
    of child support to challenge the validity of the 2014 final judgment of divorce. Kevin
    argues that the chancellor erred in 2014 when the parties’ property-settlement agreement was
    approved and incorporated in the final judgment of divorce.
    ¶14.   The Mississippi Supreme Court has held that “[a] final judgment on the merits of an
    action precludes the parties . . . from relitigating claims that were or could have been raised
    in that action.” Walton v. Bourgeois, 
    512 So. 2d 698
    , 700 (Miss. 1987). “A final judgment
    has been defined by this Court as a judgment adjudicating the merits of the controversy [that]
    settles all the issues as to all the parties.” Sanford v. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    421 So. 2d 488
    , 490-
    91 (Miss. 1982). “[A]n order is considered final if it ends the litigation on the merits and
    leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.” LaFontaine v. Holliday, 
    110 So. 3d 785
    , 787 (¶8) (Miss. 2013).
    ¶15.   Here, the 2014 judgment of divorce was a final judgment. Because there was no
    appeal, Kevin’s attack on the 2014 final judgment is barred by res judicata. “Res judicata
    bars all issues that might have been (or could have been) raised and decided in the initial suit,
    plus all issues that were actually decided in the first cause of action.” Little v. V & G
    Welding Supply Inc., 
    704 So. 2d 1336
    , 1337 (¶8) (Miss. 1997). It may not be litigated again
    under the guise of a motion for modification.
    5
    ¶16.   In addition, Kevin filed a motion for relief from the judgment under Mississippi Rule
    of Civil Procedure 60(b). In Entergy Miss. Inc. v. Richardson, 
    134 So. 3d 287
    , 291 (¶10)
    (Miss. 2014), the supreme court held:
    Rule 60(b) provides for extraordinary relief which may be granted only upon
    an adequate showing of exceptional circumstances, and that neither ignorance
    nor carelessness on the part of an attorney will provide grounds for relief.
    Rule 60(b) is not an escape hatch for litigants who have procedural
    opportunities afforded under other rules and who without cause failed to
    pursue those procedural remedies. Rule 60(b)(6)’s “catch-all” provision does
    not grant trial judges blanket discretion to reinstate cases. This Court has held
    that for a party to be granted relief under Rule 60(b)(6), he must demonstrate
    extraordinary circumstances which prevented or rendered him unable to
    prosecute his case. Rule 60(b) motions should be denied where they are merely
    an attempt to relitigate the case.
    The chancellor denied Kevin’s motion for relief from the judgment, on these same grounds,
    by order, dated November 7, 2014. Kevin did not file a timely appeal.
    ¶17.   As a result, we have determined that Kevin’s attempt to relitigate the 2014 final
    judgment of divorce is barred by the doctrine of res judicata and is not properly before the
    Court. Thus, it is not necessary for this Court to consider the question of whether the
    chancellor erred in 2014 by the failure to approve child support consistent with the statutory
    guidelines, Miss. Code Ann. § 43-19-101(1), and failure to make the required findings, Miss.
    Code Ann. § 43-19-101(2). The dissent simply determines that the 2014 judgment may be
    relitigated or challenged even though there was no timely appeal of the 2014 judgment and
    no timely appeal of the denial of the motion for relief from the judgment under Rule 60.
    ¶18.   Nevertheless, the Court has determined it is appropriate to address the challenge to
    the lump-sum child-support award.
    6
    ¶19.   Mississippi law is clear that “that child support should never be awarded in lump
    sum.”3 Pittman v. Pittman, 
    909 So. 2d 148
    , 152-53 (Miss. Ct. App. 2005) (emphasis added).
    Two of Mississippi’s distinguished law professors, who have written a book on domestic-
    relations law, agree that lump-sum child support is not proper. Mississippi College School
    of Law Professor Shelton Hand discusses the issue in his treatise. N. Shelton Hand, Miss.
    Divorce, Alimony and Child Custody, § 11 (6th ed. 2003); see also Matthew Thompson,
    Miss. Divorce, Alimony and Child Custody, § 15:10 n.1 (2018) (“Essentially, there is no such
    thing as lump sum child support.”) Likewise, University of Mississippi School of Law Dean
    and Professor Deborah Bell stated that “child support should not be awarded in lump sum
    form.” Deborah H. Bell, Bell on Mississippi Family Law, § 113.10[5], at 460 (2d ed. 2011).
    Thus, if the award of lump-sum child support were properly before this Court for review, we
    would hold that it is not a proper award of child support. The dissent appears to agree with
    this conclusion.
    ¶20.   However, the issue of whether a chancellor has awarded lump-sum child support is
    not before this Court. Instead, this Court recognizes that “property settlement agreements
    are contractual obligations.” In re Estate of Hodges, 
    807 So. 2d 438
    , 442 (¶20) (Miss. 2002).
    The provisions of a property-settlement agreement executed prior to the dissolution of
    marriage must be interpreted by courts as any other contract. 
    Id. at 445
    (¶26). In East v.
    East, 
    493 So. 2d 927
    , 931-32 (Miss. 1986), the supreme court held that “[a] true and genuine
    property settlement agreement is no different from any other contract, and the mere fact that
    3
    It is important to note that, in Pittman, this Court reviewed the chancellor’s decision
    to award lump-sum child support. This issue was properly before this Court. Here, it is not.
    7
    it is between a divorcing husband and wife, and incorporated in a divorce decree, does not
    change its character.”4
    ¶21.   Although this Court does not authorize the award of lump sum child support, we
    recognize that circumstances may arise between divorcing parties, such as here, where the
    divorcing parties may determine that there is a just and a reasonable basis for a non-custodial
    parent to agree to pay the custodial parent a lump sum amount to satisfy child support
    obligations.
    ¶22.   This Court finds no merit to this issue.
    2.      Whether the chancellor erred in the decision to deny Kevin’s motion for
    modification of his child-support obligations.
    ¶23.   Next, Kevin argues that the chancellor erred in the decision to deny Kevin’s motion
    for modification of his child support obligations.
    ¶24.   First, we consider whether the chancellor had the ability to modify the $100,000 lump
    sum child support award. In 
    Laird 788 So. 2d at 849
    (¶8), this Court held:
    Child support is awarded to the custodial parent for the benefit and protection
    of the child. Such benefits belong to the child, and the custodial parent has a
    fiduciary duty to hold them for the use of the child. The obligations vest in the
    child as they accrue, and no court may thereafter modify or forgive them if
    they are not paid. Child support money belongs to the child, not to the
    custodial parent and the custodial parent has no right to the support money
    independent of the child.
    4
    Unlike Pittman, here we do not consider whether Kevin had the power or the
    authority to agree to pay his wife $100,000 for the benefit of his children. Kevin agreed to
    the payment, the chancellor approved it in the 2014 judgment, it was not paid in a timely
    manner, and there was and is no proper challenge to this award. Likewise, it is not for this
    Court to consider or determine Kevin’s reason to agree to the lump-sum payment. As a
    businessman, Kevin may have determined that the volatile nature of his business made such
    payment necessary for the protection and benefit of his children.
    8
    (Emphasis added & citations omitted). Because the $100,000 lump-sum child-support award
    had vested, we find that the chancellor did not have the authority to “modify or forgive them
    if they were not paid.” 
    Id. Thus, we
    find no error in the chancellor’s decision to deny the
    motion for modification of the lump-sum child-support payment.
    ¶25.   However, Kevin’s request to modify his monthly child-support obligation was
    properly before the chancellor. He argues that he presented sufficient evidence for the
    chancellor to reduce his monthly obligation. The supreme court has established that the
    material change “must also be one that could not have been anticipated by the parties at the
    time of the original decree.” Tingle v. Tingle, 
    573 So. 2d 1389
    , 1391 (Miss. 1990).
    ¶26.   This Court has addressed the question of enforceability of property settlement
    agreements that include child-support obligations outside the statutory guidelines. Seeley v.
    Stafford, 
    840 So. 2d 111
    , 113-14 (¶¶10-13) (Miss. Ct. App. 2003). First we consider the
    enforceability of such agreements.
    ¶27.   In Seeley, this Court ruled that a chancellor’s refusal to modify child-support
    obligations was valid. 
    Id. The facts
    of Seeley are similar to the ones presented here. When
    Seeley and Stafford divorced, Seeley voluntarily agreed to pay child support that was double
    the statutory requirement. 
    Id. at (¶10).
    Seeley left his job on his own and, as a result, made
    less than he did when he originally signed the agreement. 
    Id. at (¶12).
    This Court, however,
    found that it was not a material change of circumstances that was unforeseeable at the time
    of the agreement. 
    Id. at (¶15).
    We reasoned that, because the parties agreed to the amount
    of child support, the statutory limit was not controlling. 
    Id. at (¶¶13-17).
    9
    ¶28.   Kevin cites Clausel v. Clausel, 
    714 So. 2d 265
    (Miss. 1998), to argue that the court
    failed to apply the factors necessary for a determination of child support outside of the
    statute. The key difference is that the decision of the trial court in Clausel came after a
    contested hearing. Seeley v. Stafford, 
    840 So. 2d 111
    , 113 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App. 2003)
    (citing Clausel v. Clausel, 
    714 So. 2d 265
    (¶1) (Miss. 1998)). Like in Seeley, this Court is
    not presented with a contested hearing, but instead a signed agreed order entered by both
    parties. 
    Id. at (¶14).
    The trial court was not required to produce any additional evidence for
    why the court deviated from the statutory guidelines because Kevin had agreed to the original
    amount of child support. Here, the agreement as to the monthly amount of child support was
    enforceable.
    ¶29.   Next, Kevin challenges the chancellor’s decision to deny his request to modify the
    monthly child support obligation. In the 2014 agreement, Kevin agreed and was ordered to
    pay $3,500 in child support each month. Unfortunately, the only payments Kevin made were
    the result of contempt proceedings and Kevin’s incarceration.
    ¶30.   Kevin told the chancellor that he was unable to pay his ordered child support after he
    lost the Texas sawmill in March 2016. While normally this Court would see the loss of a
    substantial income as a material change of circumstance, Kevin was delinquent on his
    payments for child support long before 2016. The chancellor noted that:
    Virtually all of the payments that [Cynthia] has received for the support of the
    family since the inception of the case have been forced, involuntary payments
    withheld from [Kevin’s] accounts or earnings; paid by him to avoid
    incarceration; paid to secure a release from incarceration, or paid to prevent
    adverse administrative actions against him by the State of Texas.
    10
    We agree. Kevin has only paid his support obligations when he has been threatened by
    another contempt action. Had Kevin wished to contest his original agreement, he should
    have done so at the time the divorce decree was entered. See 
    id. at 114
    (¶15). He has been
    delinquent in his payments since before he lost the sawmill; therefore his argument for
    modification was properly denied.
    ¶31.     AFFIRMED.
    BARNES AND CARLTON, P.JJ., WILSON, GREENLEE, TINDELL,
    McDONALD AND LAWRENCE, JJ., CONCUR. McCARTY, J., DISSENTS WITH
    SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION, JOINED BY WESTBROOKS, J.
    McCARTY, J., DISSENTING:
    ¶32.     Because the property-settlement agreement contracted for a banned form of lump-sum
    child support, I believe we cannot approve it. Contracts cannot be upheld when they are void
    against public policy. Furthermore, the record was clear that Kevin had suffered a material
    change of circumstances warranting a modification of child support. Thus, I respectfully
    dissent.
    ¶33.     “While a chancellor’s decisions in a divorce action are reviewed for manifest error,
    a property settlement agreement is a contract, and contract interpretation is a question of law,
    which is reviewed de novo.” McFarland v. McFarland, 
    105 So. 3d 1111
    , 1118 (¶21) (Miss.
    2013).
    ¶34.     Our Court has previously ruled “that child support should never be awarded in lump
    sum.” Pittman v. Pittman, 
    909 So. 2d 148
    , 153 (¶11) (Miss. Ct. App. 2005). Even fourteen
    years ago, we declared that “[w]e know of no authority permitting an initial lump sum award
    11
    of child support,” and even the party benefitting from it in that case could not cite any. 
    Id. Every major
    treatise that address lump-sum child support have likewise concluded it is
    banned in our courts. See Matthew Thompson, Miss. Divorce, Alimony and Child Custody,
    § 10:14 n. 20 (2018); Debbie Bell, Miss. Family Law, § 13.10[5] (2d ed. 2010); N. Shelton
    Hand Jr., Miss. Divorce, Alimony and Child Custody, § 10:9 (6th ed. 2003).
    ¶35.   By their very nature, lump-sum child-support payments preempt the prerogative of the
    Legislature to set guidelines for child support and modification. As the Supreme Court of
    Nebraska has pointed out, “child support is at all times subject to change[,] and . . . the
    Nebraska Legislature had provided for such changes by allowing for modification of child
    support.” Johnson v. Johnson, 
    862 N.W.2d 740
    , 755 (Neb. 2015). To allow lump-sum child
    support means the modification law is eroded. Id.5
    ¶36.   Under that sound reasoning, “[i]t is improper under the law to make a final, definite,
    and positive entry of such a judgment for the support of a minor child, for the amount to be
    paid must vary with the several needs of the child for food, clothing, and expenses involved
    in his education, with his necessary medical and surgical requirements, . . .” as well as
    changes in the financial status of the parents. 
    Id. (quoting Gibson
    v. Gibson, 
    26 N.W.2d 6
    ,
    10 (1947)).
    ¶37.   This is why “the law has provided that the monthly payments can be changed from
    5
    The Johnson Court further noted that “although lump-sum child support awards are
    not favored under the law in Nebraska, an obligor may receive credit against future
    obligations for payments already made, including a lump-sum payment already made where
    such payment does not preclude future child support awards or adjustments.” 
    Id. at 756.
    Therefore in that state a lump-sum payment may be acceptable so long as it does not strain
    against the statutory guidelines of modification.
    12
    time to time as the evidence warrants,” provided modification is granted. Id.; see also
    Masnev v. Masnev, 
    253 So. 3d 638
    , 639 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2018) (reversing an award of
    lump-sum child support “because no statutory or precedential authority allows for such a
    lump sum child support award” and holding that “[i]f the Florida Legislature intended to
    permit a lump sum child support award, then perhaps the Legislature would have included
    such a provision”).
    ¶38.   Although chancellors have judicial oversight over property-settlement agreements, a
    chancellor cannot be forced to approve an agreement that is void because it is against public
    policy. As Professor Hand noted, granting lump-sum child support “predetermines the needs
    of the child and would insulate the responsible parent form changes in need or other
    circumstances that might demand adjustments in the amount of support.” Hand, Miss.
    Divorce, Alimony and Child Custody § 10:9 (6th ed. 2003). Consequently, chancery courts
    “retain continuous jurisdiction over final decrees providing for alimony, custody of children
    and child support, and may modify a former decree when the circumstances and conditions
    have changed after rendition of a former decree.” Campbell v. Campbell, 
    357 So. 2d 129
    ,
    130 (Miss. 1978). “Further, no decree of alimony or child support is ever truly a final
    judgment, but always subject to modification based upon a material change of
    circumstances.” Austin v. Austin, 
    981 So. 2d 1000
    , 1005 (¶16) (Miss. Ct. App. 2007).6
    6
    The majority determines that Kevin never appealed the final judgment of divorce
    or the chancellor’s denial of his motion for relief under Rule 60(b), and so his attempt to
    seek a modification is barred. However, once Kevin’s petition for modification of child
    support was before the court, including a challenge to the validity of the lump-sum child
    support, it is fit for our review. Our statute anticipates that modification of the original
    judgment of divorce may be necessary, stating “The court may afterwards, on petition,
    13
    ¶39.   Since I also believe that Kevin proved a substantial and material change in
    circumstances warranting modification, I would reverse and remand for the chancellor to
    recalculate Kevin’s monthly child-support payments. As such, I respectfully dissent.
    WESTBROOKS, J., JOINS THIS OPINION.
    change the decree, and make from time to time such new decrees as the case may require.”
    Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-23 (Rev. 2018).
    14