FILED
Jul 27 2016, 7:07 am
CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
Janet L. Manship Russell M. Webb, Jr.
Greenfield, Indiana Plainfield, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Kevin R. Koontz, July 27, 2016
Appellant-Petitioner, Court of Appeals Case No.
32A04-1601-DR-40
v. Appeal from the Hendricks County
Circuit Court
Erin L. (Koontz) Scott, The Honorable Daniel F. Zielinski,
Appellee-Respondent. Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
32C01-1002-DR-24
Altice, Judge.
Case Summary
[1] Kevin R. Koontz (Father) appeals the trial court’s order requiring him to pay
one-third of the costs associated with his son’s college expenses. Father
contends that the trial court abused its discretion in determining that Brant
Scott-Koontz (Son) had not repudiated his relationship with Father.
Facts & Procedural History
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[2] The facts stated in the light most favorable to the trial court’s judgment follow. 1
Father’s marriage to Erin L. Koontz (Mother) was dissolved on April 9, 2009.
Mother had her maiden name of Scott restored to her in the order, but she
continued to use the name Koontz. Mother was granted sole physical and legal
custody of Son, and Father received parenting time pursuant to the Indiana
Parenting Time Guidelines. Son was twelve years old at the time of the
dissolution.
[3] Although Father lived in Kentucky, he initially exercised parenting time on
alternating weekends. On one instance in September 2009, Mother interfered
with Father’s parenting time and was later found in contempt upon Father’s
petition. Mother was warned that any further interference would result in
sanctions, and Father was provided with a make-up weekend.
[4] Thereafter, during Father’s parenting time in early December 2009, Father and
thirteen-year-old Son had a heated altercation during which Son alleged that
Father struck him in the face. This resulted in Mother filing, on December 11,
2009, an emergency petition for modification of parenting time. She also filed a
petition for change of venue from the Hancock Circuit Court. On December
16, 2009, Father filed an objection to transferring the case. At some point
shortly thereafter, the trial court held an in camera interview of Son. On
1
We remind Father that an appellant is required by our appellate rules to provide a fair statement of the facts
presented in accordance with the standard of review appropriate to the judgment being appealed. Ind.
Appellate Rule 46(A)(6). Father has not done so here, as he improperly relies on conflicting evidence in his
favor.
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January 26, 2010, the court entered an order, which is not contained in the
record before us, and transferred the case to Hendricks County. No further
action was taken by either party regarding the emergency motion, and the
Hendricks Circuit Court sua sponte dismissed the matter in September 2010.
[5] Father exercised no parenting time with Son after their disagreement in early
December 2009, nor did Father initiate any proceedings to enforce his right to
parenting time with Son. Father did not contact Son directly or indirectly for
nearly six years despite having all pertinent contact information. At some point
during this time, Father moved from Kentucky to Indiana without notifying
Son or Mother. Father continued to pay child support through income
withholdings, but in every other way he disappeared from Son’s life.
[6] Son turned eighteen in November 2014 and graduated from high school the
following month. After he was accepted to Indiana University and Ball State,
Mother sent a letter to Father in January or February 2015 regarding college
and the sharing of upcoming expenses. She proposed a 40/40/20 split. When
she did not receive a response, she looked online and discovered that Father
had moved. She then sent the letter a second time at the end of March to his
new address. Father received the second letter but did not respond. On May 7,
2015, Mother filed the instant petition seeking contribution from Father toward
Son’s college expenses.
[7] Around this same time, Father sent a Facebook friend request to Son, whom he
had not contacted in over five years. Son did not respond to the request. A few
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months later Father began calling Son’s cell phone, but Son did not answer
because he did not recognize the number. After about six weeks of calling,
Father finally left a very short voicemail message near the end of September.
Father’s message simply stated that this is your dad and call me back if you
want. Aside from several silent messages, Father left additional terse messages.
Son felt uncomfortable responding to Father after all these years, so he did not.
[8] The underlying hearing was held on November 18, 2015, less than two months
after Father left his first message for Son. At the time of the hearing, Son was
about to turn nineteen years old. He testified to being perplexed regarding
Father’s long absence and indicated that he indeed wanted a relationship with
Father. Son testified that he was open to talking with Father and anticipated
having a relationship with him. Son, however, expressed confusion regarding
how exactly to go about reestablishing a relationship after all these years.
[9] At the hearing, Son acknowledged that he used the name Brant Scott on several
social media accounts, explaining that he did so because it was easier. He
testified that he considered himself “a Koontz definitely” and uses his full legal
last name – Scott-Koontz – in all other aspects of his life. Transcript at 44-45.
All of his friends know him as Scott-Koontz.
[10] Much of Father’s testimony was in direct conflict with Son’s and Mother’s.
Further, while he acknowledged having no relationship with Son for almost six
years, he seemed to take none of the blame for this.
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[11] On December 7, 2015, the trial court issued an order wherein it found that
although Father and Son clearly have a strained relationship, the evidence did
not support a finding of repudiation by Son. The court found that “[f]rom
December 2009 until the summer of 2015 (after Mother filed her Request for
Post-Secondary Education Expenses) Father had no contact with child directly
or indirectly.” Appellant’s Appendix at 18. The court also found: “Father had the
means to request Court assistance to enforce parenting time. In fact, in 2009,
the Hancock Circuit Court admonished Mother not to interfere with Father’s
parenting time and that if she did so sanctions would be ordered.” Id. at 19.
The court ordered Mother, Father, and Son to each be responsible for one-third
of Son’s college expenses. Father now appeals.
Discussion & Decision
[12] A trial court’s decision to grant or deny college expenses is reviewed for an
abuse of discretion. Lovold v. Ellis, 988 N.E.2d 1144, 1149 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).
“An abuse of discretion occurs when a trial court’s decision is against the logic
and effect of the facts and circumstances before the court or if the court has
misinterpreted the law.” Id. at 1150. On review, we consider only the evidence
and reasonable inferences favorable to the judgment. Id.
[13] There is no absolute legal duty on the part of parents to provide a college
education for their children. Kahn v. Baker, 36 N.E.3d 1103, 1113 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2015), trans. denied. In determining whether to order parents to pay sums
toward their child’s college education, the trial court must consider whether and
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to what extent the parents, if still married, would have contributed to college
expenses. McKay v. McKay, 644 N.E.2d 164, 166 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994), trans.
denied. Where an adult child repudiates a parent, however, that parent must be
allowed to dictate what effect the repudiation has on the parent’s contribution
to college expenses. Kahn, 36 N.E.3d at 1113. Repudiation is defined as a
“complete refusal” by the adult child to participate in a relationship with the
parent. Id. at 1112. A finding regarding repudiation is particularly fact
sensitive. Id. at 1113.
[14] In McKay, this court addressed the issue of repudiation for the first time and
expressly adopted the rationale of Milne v. Milne, 556 A.2d 854 (Pa. Super. Ct.
1989). The rationale focused on the post-majority attitudes and behavior of the
child and the inequity that would result from requiring a repudiated parent to
pay college expenses:
We will not provide [a child who has repudiated his parent] with
the means of inflicting yet another blow to a parent who has
already suffered the deeply painful rejection of his or her child.
Just as divorcing parents run the risk of alienating their children,
adult children who willfully abandon a parent must be deemed to
have run the risk that such a parent may not be willing to
underwrite their educational pursuits. Such children, when faced
with the answer ‘no’ to their requests, may decide to seek the
funds elsewhere; some may decide that the time is ripe for
reconciliation. They will not, in any event, be allowed to enlist
the aid of the court in compelling that parent to support their
educational efforts unless and until they demonstrate a minimum
amount of respect and consideration for that parent.
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[15] McKay, 644 N.E.2d at 167 (quoting Milne, 556 A.2d at 865) (alteration in
McKay).
[16] The father in McKay exercised parenting time with his teenage son for about
three years before intense acrimony resulted in father voluntarily relinquishing
his parenting time in 1987. After treatment for depression, the father sought to
reconcile with his son in 1991, but the son was not interested in reestablishing a
relationship. When informal efforts failed, the father filed a petition to enforce
parenting time. The son was ordered to participate in counseling, but even after
counseling, the son refused to visit with his father.
[17] Thereafter, when the son’s college expenses increased substantially, both
parents filed petitions for modification of child support/educational expenses.
At the hearing, the then-twenty-year-old son testified that he had no interest in
a relationship with his father and that nothing could be done to change his
mind. He referred to his mother and step-father as his parents with whom he
consulted with regard to his college-related decisions.
[18] In determining that the son had repudiated the relationship with his father, this
court noted that the son, as an adult, had steadfastly rejected his father’s efforts
to reconcile. Well before the action regarding college expenses, the father
“stood with open arms to reestablish a father-son relationship”, even seeking
assistance from the court in furtherance of his endeavor. Id. at 168. The son,
however, made clear that he had no interest in a relationship with his father.
We observed, “All Joel wants from Father is money.” Id. Accordingly, we
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concluded that the son’s repudiation of his father relieved the father of any
further responsibility to contribute toward the son’s college education. Id.
[19] Since McKay, we have consistently upheld trial court findings of repudiation
where children, after entering adulthood, continue to actively reject a parent.
See Lovold, 988 N.E.2d 1150-52 (despite father’s willingness for years to
maintain a relationship, child continued into adulthood to refuse a relationship
with father); Lechien v. Wren, 950 N.E.2d 838 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (adult son’s
only communication with father for over a year was when he went to father’s
workplace to ask for money, son had not acknowledged Father’s Day or
father’s birthday for several years, and as an adult, son petitioned to have his
last name changed to his mother’s maiden name); Scales v. Scales, 891 N.E.2d
1116, 1120 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008) (last time mother saw adult daughter was six
months before the hearing in a meeting that had been confrontational and
intimidating to mother, and in a telephone conversation a few days before the
hearing, her adult son had told her, “I hate you you f[***]ing bitch. I hope you
die.”); Norris v. Pethe, 833 N.E.2d 1024, 1033 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (even though
daughter’s blatant rejection of her father2 commenced in 2000, when she was a
2
In Norris, the father spent more than two years attempting to improve his relationship with his daughter.
He sought the trial court’s assistance on more than one occasion, including obtaining court-ordered
counseling. In addition to counseling sessions, he sent cards and attended school activities. Yet, the
daughter made clear that she wanted nothing to do with him. She returned his cards unopened, confronted
him at a school event and demanded that he leave, was hurtful and cold at counseling sessions, and threw
away flowers and cards sent by father. She informed her father: “You’re wasting your time and money. The
flowers are in a trash can at school, just like our relationship…. No matter what the judge orders, he can’t
order my heart.” Id.
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minor, “it continued uninterrupted after she reached majority in August of
2002”).
[20] In this case, by contrast, the trial court determined that Son had not repudiated
his relationship with Father. The evidence favorable to the judgment reveals
that Father had no contact with Son from December 2009 until the summer of
2015. After Son turned thirteen years old, Father abandoned him for nearly six
years, essentially dropping off the face of the earth. Son did not understand
why Father did this. Yet, Son testified at the hearing, then almost nineteen
years old, that he was open to talking with Father and anticipated having a
relationship with him. Son, understandably, was confused regarding how to go
about reestablishing a relationship after all these years, but he expressly
indicated that was his desire.
[21] We observe that Father’s meager attempts to reach out to his son occurred only
after Mother filed her petition for contribution towards Son’s college expenses.
Beginning in late-September 2015, less than two months before the hearing,
Father left a few very short voicemail messages for Son that went unreturned.
These calls, made in the eleventh hour, appear chiefly motived by the request
for college expenses, not by a true desire to restore a relationship with Son, and
Father’s claims of rejection ring hollow.
[22] Much of Father’s argument on appeal amounts to a request to reweigh the
evidence and judge the credibility of witnesses, which we cannot do. See Lovold,
988 N.E.2d at 1151. This is not a case of a father standing with open arms and
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suffering “the deeply painful rejection” of his child. McKay, 644 N.E.2d at 167
(quoting Milne, 556 A.2d at 865). Based on our review of the evidence and
testimony most favorable to the judgment, we cannot say that we are left with a
firm conviction that a mistake has been made or that the evidence does not
support the trial court’s determination that Son has not repudiated his
relationship with Father. Lechien, 950 N.E.2d at 844.
[23] Judgment affirmed.
[24] Bailey, J. and Bradford, J., concur.
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