IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2014-CA-00781-COA
ROBERT H. HARDIN, JR. APPELLANT
v.
BETTY GRANTHAM (HARDIN) APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/12/2014
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JOSEPH KILGORE
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CARROLL COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: TOM P. CALHOUN III
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: PATRICIA ABRAHAM RODGERS
KATHERINE TACKETT MILLS
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: DENIED APPELLANT’S MOTION TO
TERMINATE OR MODIFY HIS
PERMANENT-ALIMONY PAYMENTS
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/01/2016
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE IRVING, P.J., CARLTON AND JAMES, JJ.
CARLTON, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Robert Hardin Jr. appeals the Carroll County Chancery Court’s denial of his petition
for modification of alimony. Robert argues on appeal that the chancellor abused his
discretion by denying Robert’s petition to terminate or modify his permanent-alimony
payments to his ex-wife, Betty Grantham. Finding no error, we affirm.
FACTS
¶2. Robert and Betty divorced in 1991 after a fourteen-year marriage. As part of the
couple’s divorce judgment, the chancellor awarded Betty $750 a month in permanent
alimony. In April 2013, Robert stopped making his alimony payments to Betty. The next
month, on May 9, 2013, Robert filed a petition to terminate or modify his alimony payments.
In his petition, Robert asserted that a material change in circumstances had occurred so as
to warrant a modification or termination of alimony.
¶3. The chancellor conducted a hearing on February 7, 2014. Both Robert and Betty
testified and submitted Rule 8.051 financial statements. As stated in his bench opinion, the
chancellor found Betty to be a credible witness. By contrast, the chancellor found that
Robert lacked candor and provided answers that were both evasive and inconsistent.
¶4. In determining whether a material change in circumstances had occurred, the
chancellor first reviewed the parties’ income and expenses at the time of their divorce in
1991. In doing so, the chancellor reviewed and incorporated into his bench opinion some of
the findings of fact made by Judge John C. Love Jr., who granted the couple’s divorce in
1991. Judge Love had noted that, during the couple’s marriage, Robert owned a printing
business, Mississippi Printing, and Betty worked as a public schoolteacher. Although Judge
Love found that Robert’s business was profitable during the course of the marriage, he also
found that little equity existed in the business at the time of the divorce due mainly to the
$84,000 salary Robert withdrew each year. After concluding that Robert would be unable
to continue to draw such a large salary, Judge Love projected Robert’s future income to be
$40,000, and he based his award of alimony to Betty on that figure.
¶5. After reviewing the parties’ income and expenses at the time of their divorce, the
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See UCCR 8.05.
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chancellor in the present case next examined the parties’ income and expenses at the time of
the hearing on Robert’s petition. The chancellor also conducted an analysis of the factors set
forth in Armstrong v. Armstrong, 618 So. 2d 1278, 1280 (Miss. 1993). With regard to the
Armstrong factors, the chancellor made the following findings in his bench opinion:
[Robert] is [sixty-five] years old. He has an adjusted gross income, as reported
on his 8.05 financial statement, of $5,562 per month. [Robert] testified that
there is nothing about his health that would prevent him from being able to
take on other work. He lists his personal expenses [as] $4,882.55; however,
this amount includes the $750 in alimony that he has not paid since April 2013.
He also lists his business expenses of $8,351.74 per month and says that these
are due mainly to loan payments, bank and credit[-]card charges, mortgage
payments, and interest on loans for the debt owed on his business. He owns
two pieces of property in Greenwood, [Mississippi,] one of which is rented by
Audio Central[,] and another building that is vacant.
[Robert] has, among other accounts, a $10,000 certificate of deposit and
a checking account with a balance of $14,154.62. Both of these are in his
name. [Robert] lists numerous liabilities and again credits [these] to the recent
misfortunes of the printing industry.
[Betty], on the other hand, is a [sixty-six-year-old] retired schoolteacher
who has an adjusted gross income of $3,250.52 and has recently started a part-
time job tutoring. She started this subsequent to the alimony payments being
stopped. She earns approximately $450 per month from tutoring during
school-year months only.
She testified that she cannot work full-time in a class due to severe
arthritis in her legs and back, but she receives $2,159.52 in retirement from her
over [thirty] years as a teacher in the Mississippi public[-]school system.
[Betty] still resides in the same home that she did since the time
immediately following her divorce from [Robert] and has made no extravagant
purchases. She lives month-to-month and is dependent on the alimony
payment . . . to pay her monthly mortgage and to meet her other monthly
expenses. . . . [Betty’s] expenses total $3.024.83, and she has no money in
savings. [Betty] testified that she has a hard time meeting monthly expenses
even when she was receiving alimony from [Robert] and states specifically
that it[ has] been very difficult finding the money to pay her property taxes
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during times of emergency.
[Betty] has approximately $37,000 of equity in her home and has no
other assets, other than her 2003 Volkswagon Beetle. [Betty] has had to pay
tax penalties because [she] has to pay estimated taxes each quarter based on
her projected income . . . , which includes alimony.
[Betty] used the alimony in projecting her income for 2013 and has
continued to pay the full amounts of these estimated taxes in spite of not
actually receiving the alimony. . . .
In further looking at the Armstrong factors, the parties were married for
[fourteen] years . . . , and neither party has any minor children in their
respective homes.
It appears to the court that[,] after the divorce, the only material change
in circumstances is that [Robert’s] business became very successful and
brought [Robert] many opportunities and luxuries. At no time did [Betty] ask
for an increase in alimony. By the time of trial, it appears that [Robert’s]
financial situation is back where it was at the time of the divorce, but certainly
[it] is no worse that it was at the time of the divorce.
Judge Love based the initial [alimony] award . . . on [Robert’s]
projected income of $40,000 per year and [Betty’s] much lower income. The
court also acknowledged [Robert’s] numerous financial obligations at the time
and his substantial debts. There are still numerous financial obligations . . .
and substantial debts, and there is still a disparity in income.
¶6. After completing his discussion of the Armstrong factors, the chancellor found that
no material change in circumstances had occurred that was not reasonably anticipated at the
time of the parties’ divorce. As a result, the chancellor denied Robert’s request for
termination or modification of his alimony payments. The chancellor also found that,
because Robert had failed to pay alimony since April 2013, he owed ten months of alimony
totaling $7,500. Aggrieved by the chancellor’s judgment, Robert appeals to this Court.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
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¶7. “This Court’s standard of review in domestic[-]relations matters is extremely limited.”
Phillips v. Phillips, 45 So. 3d 684, 692 (¶23) (Miss. Ct. App. 2010). Our caselaw recognizes
that a chancellor possesses broad discretion in alimony cases. McMinn v. McMinn, 171 So.
3d 511, 514 (¶8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2014). An appellate court will not disturb a chancellor’s
findings unless the findings were manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous or unless the
chancellor applied an erroneous legal standard. Phillips, 45 So. 3d at 692 (¶23). In addition,
when the record contains substantial evidence to support the chancellor’s findings of fact,
we will not reverse his decision. Id.
DISCUSSION
¶8. On appeal, Robert challenges the chancellor’s denial of his petition, arguing that
insufficient evidence supported the chancellor’s finding that no unanticipated material
change in circumstances occurred to warrant the termination or modification of alimony.
Robert asserts the evidence shows he has experienced an unforeseeable material change in
circumstances since the time of the parties’ divorce due to the decline in his business income
and the increase in his business expenses.
¶9. Our caselaw establishes the following framework for chancellors to apply in
determining whether to modify an award of permanent alimony:
[C]hancellors must first determine if an unforeseeable and material change in
circumstances occurred since [the] entry of the initial divorce decree. If not,
modification is not permitted.
However, if a substantial unanticipated change has in fact occurred, the
chancellor should then consider the Armstrong factors to determine the
appropriate amount of alimony. In evaluating these factors when deciding
whether to modify periodic alimony, chancellors should compare the relative
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positions of the parties at the time of the request for modification in relation
to their positions at the time of the divorce decree. As with any alimony
consideration, the chancellor must consider the wife’s accustomed standard of
living, less her own resources, as well as the husband’s ability to pay.
Peterson v. Peterson, 129 So. 3d 255, 257 (¶¶7-8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2013) (internal citations
and quotation marks omitted).
¶10. As previously discussed, the chancellor found that Robert reported the following on
his Rule 8.05 financial statement: (1) an adjusted gross income of $5,562 per month; (2)
personal expenses of $4,882.55, which included the $750 in alimony that he stopped paying
in April 2013; and (3) business expenses of $8,351.74 per month. On appeal, Robert
contends that the sum of $8,351.74 represents his combined total personal expenses and
business expenses and that his financial statement shows he is currently operating at a net
loss.
¶11. According to Robert, at the time of the parties’ divorce, Mississippi Printing generated
about $80,000 a year for him. However, Robert asserts that his business income has since
declined and that he was even forced to close the business in 2008. Robert argues that these
events could not be reasonably anticipated at the time of the parties’ divorce. In addition,
Robert states that he has two pending lawsuits against him, one asserting a claim for
$300,000, and the other asserting a claim for $80,000.
¶12. As a result of these developments and his changed financial situation, Robert argues
that he can no longer afford to pay his monthly alimony obligation. Robert further asserts
that, based on the financial statements the parties submitted, Betty possesses more disposable
income than him. Because Robert claims that his business and personal expenses clearly
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leave him with a significant monthly deficit when compared to his disposable income, Robert
asserts that the chancellor erred by failing to terminate or modify his alimony payments.
¶13. Despite Robert’s assertions, the Mississippi Supreme Court has previously rejected
“the idea that alimony or child[-]support obligations should be reduced because of the
obligor’s other financial commitments[.]” Yancey v. Yancey, 752 So. 2d 1006, 1010 (¶12)
(Miss. 1999) (citing Varner v. Varner, 666 So. 2d 493, 497 (Miss. 1995)). See also N.
Shelton Hand, Mississippi Divorce, Alimony, and Child Custody § 14–10 (6th ed. 2012)
(“Obligations of child and[/]or spousal support are not generally to be considered as or
equated with any other debt known to and collectible under the law. There is more to these
obligations than mere debt.”).
¶14. In Varner, a husband argued that the chancellor should reduce his child-support and
alimony obligations in light of his other financial obligations. Varner, 666 So. 2d at 497.
After the parties’ divorce, the husband opened his own veterinary practice. Id. He also filed
for bankruptcy, and he claimed that he had been forced to borrow money from friends and
family to pay his child-support and alimony obligations. Id. at 495-97.
¶15. On appeal, the supreme court found no merit to the husband’s argument that his child-
support and alimony obligations should be modified. Id. at 497. In fact, the supreme court
stated:
Personal bills cannot be used as a factor to reduce support payments.
Furthermore, simply alleging, as does [the husband], that one is subsisting on
borrowed funds does not show with the required particularity that he is unable
to pay.
In this case, the chancellor properly found that there had been no
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material change in circumstances. [The husband’s] income apparently
decreased between the time of his divorce and the hearing. However, that
decrease was directly related to his decision to open a solo practice and a
voluntary move which caused him to give up his supplemental income. [The
husband] filed for bankruptcy on July 7, 1993, two weeks after the chancellor
denied his request for modification. His bankruptcy petition was dismissed
and the case closed on April 18, 1995.
A debtor is prohibited from discharging debt to a former spouse for
alimony or support to a child in connection with a separation agreement.
Furthermore, simply filing for bankruptcy does not rise to the level of a
substantial change without a finding by the chancellor that the filing was made
in good faith. The law is well-settled that, if an obligor, acting in bad faith,
voluntarily worsens his financial position so that he cannot meet his
obligations, he cannot obtain a modification of support.
Id. (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
¶16. Citing Mississippi precedent, including the supreme court’s holding in Varner, the
chancellor here found no merit to Robert’s claim that his alimony payments should be
modified or terminated because he had incurred other debts and financial obligations.
Instead, the chancellor found that he must compare the parties’ relative positions at the time
of the divorce with their positions at the time of the requested modification to determine
whether an unforeseeable and material change occurred. In looking at the facts of the present
litigation, the chancellor ultimately concluded that the only material postdivorce change
occurred when Robert’s business became very successful and afforded him many
opportunities and luxuries.
¶17. As discussed in his bench opinion, the chancellor found the following events occurred
after the parties’ divorce: (1) Robert built a home in 1995 for about $255,000, which he later
sold for about $400,000; (2) he bought a yacht in 2005 for just under $500,000, and although
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he had to sell the yacht in a short sale, he received an undisclosed amount of money from a
lawsuit against the yacht’s manufacturer; (3) he purchased a Porsche in 2006 for about
$56,000; (4) he purchased a motorcycle in 2007 for about $18,000; and (5) he took a ten-to-
fourteen-day vacation to the Yucatán in 2010.
¶18. Unrelated to Robert’s business success, the chancellor also acknowledged that Robert
received a substantial inheritance from his father’s estate in 1997. In addition, the chancellor
found that, the month after Robert stopped paying his alimony obligation, he “went public
with a new barbecue company [and] offered prize money in the amount of $1,100 to the
winner of the [company’s] label contest.” Although Robert testified that the business failed
to make money and that he turned the business over to his son, the chancellor still found that
Robert “publicly stated to the world that he could pay $1,100 while he was not meeting his
alimony obligation in this matter.”
¶19. Despite the favorable material change that Robert’s business experienced following
the parties’ divorce, the chancellor found that Betty never sought an increase in Robert’s
alimony payments. Although the chancellor determined that, by the time of the hearing,
Robert’s financial situation appeared to have returned to the same level as when the parties
divorced, he also stated that Robert’s situation was “no worse than it was at the time of the
divorce.” After analyzing the Armstrong factors, the chancellor further concluded that no
unanticipated material change occurred to warrant termination or modification of Robert’s
alimony payments. As a result, the chancellor denied Robert’s petition.
¶20. After reviewing the record and relevant caselaw, we find no abuse of discretion by the
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chancellor’s denial of Robert’s petition. See McMinn, 171 So. 3d at 514 (¶8). The record
contains sufficient credible evidence to support the chancellor’s finding that no unforeseeable
material change in circumstances occurred to warrant modification or termination of Robert’s
permanent-alimony payments. See id. at 514-15 (¶8). As a result, we find this issue lacks
merit.
¶21. THE JUDGMENT OF THE CARROLL COUNTY CHANCERY COURT IS
AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE
APPELLANT.
LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, FAIR, JAMES
AND WILSON, JJ., CONCUR. GREENLEE, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
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