IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2015-CA-00646-COA
JOHN R. BELL APPELLANT
v.
LORI M. BELL APPELLEE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/12/2015
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. J. LARRY BUFFINGTON
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CARROLL COUNTY CHANCERY COURT,
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: KIMBERLY P. TURNER
ROBERT W. LONG
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: JONATHAN RYAN TAYLOR
ALAN D. LANCASTER
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: GRANTED APPELLEE’S PETITION FOR
MODIFICATION OF CHILD SUPPORT;
FOUND APPELLANT IN CONTEMPT FOR
FAILURE TO PAY CHILD SUPPORT AND
OTHER EXPENSES FOR THE CHILD;
AWARDED APPELLEE A JUDGMENT OF
$37,832.35 FOR THE TOTAL
ARREARAGE; ORDERED APPELLANT TO
PAY $30,500 OF STUDENT-LOAN DEBT;
AWARDED APPELLEE $1,000 IN
ATTORNEY’S FEES
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND
RENDERED IN PART: 12/06/2016
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE LEE, C.J., BARNES AND ISHEE, JJ.
BARNES, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. John Bell (Jack) appeals the judgment of the Chancery Court of Carroll County on
his petition for modification of the parties’ agreed final judgment of divorce. The chancellor
found a material change in circumstances regarding Jack’s earnings since the entry of the
judgment of divorce; therefore, the chancellor reduced Jack’s child support. However,
because Jack had agreed to pay private-school tuition for the parties’ minor daughter,
Kinsley, and his ex-wife Lori Bell’s student loans at the time of the divorce, the chancellor
ruled Jack would still be required to pay the tuition and one-half of the student-loan debt.
Jack appeals, claiming the trial court was in error for including private-school tuition within
his child-support obligation. He also complains that the trial court should not have awarded
Lori a lump-sum amount for student-loan indebtedness or $1,000 in attorney’s fees. Finding
error only in the grant of attorney’s fees, and a slight miscalculation in the student-loan
indebtedness, we affirm in part and reverse and render in part.
STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. In March 2010, the chancery court entered Lori and Jack’s agreed final judgment of
divorce based on irreconcilable differences. They had been married since November 1999.
A daughter, Kinsley, was born of the marriage in July 2000, and she was fifteen years old
at the time of this appeal. Lori and Jack signed a custody, support, and property-settlement
agreement at the time of divorce.1 Jack agreed to pay $1,700 per month as child support, not
subject to reduction as long as Lori was making payments on approximately $130,000 in
1
In the divorce proceedings, Lori, a licensed and practicing attorney in Mississippi,
was represented by counsel; Jack represented himself under the impression that Lori “would
handle the matter.” On the petition for modification, both parties were represented by
counsel.
2
student loans the couple had amassed. Jack also agreed to maintain Kinsley’s health
insurance, pay all health-related expenses not covered by insurance, fully fund the
Mississippi Prepaid Affordable College Tuition (MPACT) program to provide for Kinsley’s
college education, and pay for one-half the cost of her extracurricular activities. The
agreement stated that Lori would pay the $130,000 in student-loan debt, which was in her
name, even though the funds were used by both parties for their college education, in return
for Jack’s paying $1,700 in child support, which was over the statutory guidelines
percentage. At the time of the divorce, Jack was employed as a mechanical engineer at
Greenwood Utility, reporting an adjusted gross monthly income of $3,077. Lori was an
attorney who reported an adjusted gross monthly income of $2,515.66.
¶3. Jack was laid off from his Greenwood Utilities employment shortly following the
divorce. After a short time at another utility company, Jack began working at his mother’s
general country store. However, the store closed in April 2011 and was sold. In June, Jack
moved to Daphne, Alabama, to seek employment and be closer to his then-girlfriend and
now-wife, Julie. Because Jack was unemployed, he began paying only $625 per month in
child support to Lori instead of $1,700.2
¶4. In May 2012, Jack filed a petition for modification of the final judgment of divorce.
Due to his inability to find stable employment, Jack sought a reduction in child support from
2
In July 2011, Jack paid Lori approximately $25,000 in back support after the sale
of his mother’s store.
3
$1,700 to $625 per month, inclusive of all after-school care, health-insurance premiums, and
extracurricular activities, as well as modification of his obligation to pay all of Kinsley’s
medical expenses, and his funding of MPACT, among other matters. Lori answered and
counterclaimed for contempt of court due to Jack’s failure to maintain health insurance for
Kinsley, fully fund MPACT, and pay all child support, medical expenses, after-school care,
and extracurricular activities as agreed upon in the final judgment.
¶5. In April 2014, a hearing was held on Jack’s petition and Lori’s counterclaim.3 At this
time, Jack’s adjusted gross monthly income was $2,575.35. The chancellor held Jack in
contempt for the following arrearage: child support in the amount of $34,775,
extracurricular activities of $2,592.23, uncovered medical expenses of $465.12, and failing
to fund MPACT or provide health insurance, resulting in a judgment against him of
$37,832.35. The chancellor ordered Jack to pay a lump sum of $3,297.48 by June 2014,
with the remaining balance of the arrearage to be paid at the rate of $135 per month. Jack
was also ordered to fund the least expensive MPACT fund presently available for Kinsley’s
college-tuition expenses, and to pay $1,000 to Lori’s attorney as partial reimbursement for
her attorney’s fees. Additionally, the chancellor amended the prior judgment of divorce.
The chancellor found a material change in circumstances arising from Jack’s earnings since
the entry of divorce; therefore, Jack’s child-support obligation was reduced to $865 per
3
Two chancellors recused themselves from the matter; so a special judge was
appointed.
4
month.4 This figure constituted $365 per month in child support based on Jack’s current
salary, and $500 a month for tuition to Pillow Academy in Greenwood, Mississippi, where
Kinsley had been attending private school. The chancellor explained that the $500 was a
deviation from the guidelines due to Jack’s original agreement to pay private-school tuition.
Jack was also ordered to continue to maintain health insurance for Kinsley, but he was only
responsible for one-half of her uncovered medical expenses. He was also to pay one-half
of her dance expenses at Pillow Academy, but no other extracurricular activities, and he was
no longer responsible for one-half of Kinsley’s after-school-care expenses. Visitation rights
were slightly modified for convenience of the parties, since Lori lived in Coila, Mississippi,
and Jack had moved to Daphne, Alabama. Finally, Jack was ordered to pay $30,500 of
Lori’s student-loan debt before April 2015, or incur 4% interest on the remaining balance.5
Jack timely appealed, raising three issues regarding his payment of the private-school tuition,
student-loan debt, and attorney’s fees.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶6. This Court “will not disturb the findings of a chancellor when supported by
4
The chancellor noted the $865 per month for child support plus the $135 per month
for the student-loan repayment would total $1,000 per month in payments for Jack, down
from $1,700 per month.
5
The chancellor arrived at the figure of $30,500 by taking $135,000 in total student
loans, which were all in Lori’s name, subtracting $74,000 which Lori testified was strictly
her debt, leaving $61,000 used for living expenses and thus attributable to both parties; the
chancellor then divided that figure in half. While the original divorce decree lists $130,000
in student-loan debt, Jack does not cite this difference as error.
5
substantial evidence unless the chancellor abused his discretion, was manifestly wrong,
clearly erroneous, or an erroneous legal standard was applied.” Sanderson v. Sanderson,
824 So. 2d 623, 625-26 (¶8) (Miss. 2002) (citation omitted). Chancellors are given broad
discretion in the area of modification of child support. Morris v. Stacey, 641 So. 2d 1194,
1196 (Miss. 1994). “[T]he process of weighing evidence and arriving at an award of child
support is essentially an exercise in fact-finding,” which restricts this Court’s review
significantly. Clausel v. Clausel, 714 So. 2d 265, 266-67 (¶6) (Miss. 1998) (quoting
Gillespie v. Gillespie, 594 So. 2d 620, 622 (Miss. 1992)).
ANALYSIS
1. Child Support
¶7. Jack argues that the chancellor erred when downwardly modifying his child support
by deviating from the statutory guidelines and including private-school tuition within the
obligation without making a specific finding to support it. Therefore, he claims the
chancellor’s imposition of tuition should be reversed.
¶8. Under the applicable Mississippi statute, a noncustodial parent of one child should
pay 14% of his or her adjusted gross income for child support.6 Miss. Code Ann. § 43-19-
101(3)(b) (Rev. 2015). A rebuttable presumption of “justness or appropriateness of an
award or modification of child support” based upon the guidelines is established, but it “may
6
Adjusted gross income is defined as the amount remaining after deductions for
federal, state, and local taxes, social security, retirement, and disability contributions. Miss.
Code Ann. § 43-19-101(3) (Rev. 2015).
6
be overcome by a judicial or administrative body . . . making a written finding or specific
finding on the record” that the guidelines are inappropriate in a particular case. Miss. Code
Ann. § 43-19-103 (Rev. 2015). Child-support obligations “can be modified when there is
a finding of a material change in circumstances [that] was not foreseeable at the time of the
judgment of divorce.” Short v. Short, 131 So. 3d 1149, 1152 (¶8) (Miss. 2014).
¶9. Jack complains that the $500 per month in private-school tuition made his child-
support obligation greater than 33.5% of his adjusted gross income, and with all support-
related costs for Kinsley, his obligation was over 51% of his adjusted gross income.
Moreover, he claims the finding by the chancellor at the modification hearing regarding the
statutory deviation was insufficient. We disagree.
¶10. The chancellor found a material change in circumstance and granted Jack’s request
for a downward modification in child support and other financial obligations. Jack’s
payment decreased from $1,700 per month to $1,000 per month – both figures including
consideration for student-loan debt as well as child support.7 The child-support figure of
$865 constituted $365 in statutory child support (14% of his adjusted gross income of
$2,575.35)8 and $500 for private-school tuition at Pillow Academy – the cost of tuition for
one month.
7
These figures represent 55% and 39% of Jack’s adjusted gross income, respectively.
8
Jack reported an adjusted gross income of $2,575.35 on his current Rule 8.05 form,
which is approximately $500 less than was reported on his original Rule 8.05 form. See
UCCR 8.05.
7
¶11. There was no specific explanation in the agreement itself regarding what comprised
the $1,700, but the parties explained their original and current intentions at the modification
hearing. The original custody, support, and property-settlement agreement, signed by both
parties, stated:
As child support, Husband . . . shall pay $1,700 per month, as child support,
following the entry of divorce which he shall pay . . . thereafter until the child
attains the age of twenty-one years, marries or becomes emancipated,
whichever occurs first. This child support shall not be subject to reduction as
long as Wife is paying on the $130,000 student loan referred to hereinafter.
Another provision in the agreement that related to how the parties arrived at the child-
support figure was related to the student-loan debts:
Wife shall pay the following debts: all debts in her name alone including the
$130,000 student loan. It is agreed that this student loan was used by both
Husband and Wife for their college educations, and that Wife is agreeing to
be responsible for paying all of it in consideration of Husband paying her the
child support set out in paragraph 3 above.
At the modification hearing during examination by Lori’s counsel, Jack responded
affirmatively that the two of them agreed to all of the terms and provisions of the agreement,
waited sixty days, and were granted a divorce, and that Jack agreed to pay $1,700 per month
in child support under the agreement. Jack further stated during questioning that they came
up with the $1,700 figure “because of her student loans and everything else.” He admitted
Pillow Academy tuition was also factored into the figure, which was approximately $450
to $500 per month at the time. Jack stated Kinsley had gone to Pillow Academy since “day
one,” or six years at that time, and he wanted her to continue attending the school.
8
Regarding the student loans, Jack admitted the $130,000 was “more than just a student
loan”; it included some of their joint living expenses while Lori received her law degree
from the University of Tulsa. Jack affirmed that he told the chancellor during the divorce
proceedings that he could comply with all of the obligations of the agreement, including the
$1,700 in child support.
¶12. As Lori points out, chancellors are not required to make specific findings of fact
supporting upward deviations in child support when the parties have previously, knowingly,
and willfully obligated themselves to pay more than the guidelines require, such as through
a valid agreement. See Stigler v. Stigler, 48 So. 3d 547, 555 (¶29) (Miss. Ct. App. 2010).
In divorce agreements, “parties may in fact agree of their own volition to do more than the
law requires of them. Where such a valid agreement is made, it may be enforced just as any
other contract.” Id. at 551 (¶9) (quoting Rogers v. Rogers, 919 So. 2d 184, 189 (¶19) (Miss.
Ct. App. 2005)). Unlike Stigler, however, here the modification was not upward, and as
Jack states, the parties did not agree to the terms of the modification. Stigler did not involve
a child-support modification, but the initial agreement. Lori also cites to Short, 131 So. 3d
at 1152 (¶10), where the supreme court denied downwardly modifying the husband’s child-
support obligation and enforced the original agreement because, while the obligation was
“indeed high, [the husband] freely consented” to provide more support than the statutory
guidelines recommended.
¶13. Jack cites to Southerland v. Southerland, 816 So. 2d 1004, 1006 (¶9) (Miss. 2002),
9
Moses v. Moses, 879 So. 2d 1043, 1048 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App. 2004), and Kilgore v. Fuller,
741 So. 2d 351, 354 (¶11) (Miss. Ct. App. 1999), for the proposition that private-school
tuition is an ordinary expense to be included in the statutory amount of child support, and
not to be calculated separately or in addition to the support award. Further, if an award
exceeds the presumptive amount of the guidelines, the chancellor must make a specific
finding as to why it is just or appropriate. However, neither Southerland nor Moses
involved a modification award, and Kilgore was an increase in child support, not a decrease.
¶14. While all of the authority cited by the parties is somewhat distinguishable, we find
the chancellor made a sufficient finding at the modification hearing that Jack must continue
to pay private-school tuition. The finding was based upon Jack and Lori’s detailed
testimony that Jack wanted Kinsley to continue her education at Pillow Academy, where she
had been for six years. We do not agree with Jack that the sole basis of the chancellor’s
ruling was the prior agreement. The chancellor took into account what the parties had
agreed to before, as well as the way they had raised and educated the child since the divorce.
The chancellor was able both to downwardly modify Jack’s child support nearly by half, and
provide for private-school tuition within the obligation. We find no error with the
modification.
¶15. The chancellor provided a sufficient explanation to deviate from the statutory
guidelines of child support and include private-school tuition. This issue is without merit.
2. Student-Loan Debt
10
¶16. Jack claims that the trial court erred in awarding Lori a lump sum of $30,500,
representing student-loan debt. The chancellor took $135,000 in total student-loan debt
mentioned in the divorce decree and subtracted $74,000, which Lori admitted was her law-
school tuition and book expenses for three years. The remaining $61,000 was student loans
attributable to both of their living expenses; therefore, the chancellor took one-half of that
figure and granted a judgment to Lori of $30,500. As previously noted, the original divorce
decree lists $130,000 as the amount of debt rather than $135,000.
¶17. Jack does not raise this as error but argues that there were several other
miscalculations related to the student-loan judgment. He claims Lori actually attended law
school for four years, not three, and thus her total indebtedness was not $74,000 but $96,000
($21,000 in tuition each year and $12,000 in books for four years). Jack argues $130,000
less $96,000 is $34,000, and one-half of this figure is $17,000, so that should be the
maximum portion of indebtedness he is responsible for, not $30,500.
¶18. Jack also contends the inclusion of approximately $500 within the original child-
support amount of $1,700 was only to benefit Lori, so she could repay her student loans.
Jack claims this, as well as the provision in the original decree that did not allow Jack to
reduce his child-support obligation as long as Lori was paying on the $130,000 in student
loans, constituted overreaching by Lori when the original agreement was made in 2010.
¶19. “Parties are allowed broad latitude in making decisions regarding property settlement
agreements in divorce proceedings, and absent overreaching or fraud, the agreements will
11
be enforced.” Price v. Price, 5 So. 3d 1151, 1155 (¶9) (Miss. Ct. App. 2009) (citing Speed
v. Speed, 757 So. 2d 221, 224-25 (¶8) (Miss. 2000)). “Overreaching occurs when an
agreement: (1) ‘is so one-sided and unfair that it could never be considered adequate and
sufficient,’ and (2) ‘resulted from an inequality of bargaining power or other circumstances
such that there was no meaningful choice on the part of the disadvantaged party.’” Id.
(quoting In re Dissolution of the Marriage of De St. Germain, 977 So. 2d 412, 419 (¶21)
(Miss. Ct. App. 2008)).
¶20. Jack’s arguments on overreaching relate to the original divorce agreement, when Jack
chose not to be represented by counsel and never contested the provision related to student
loans until this appeal. Lori testified that it “was [their] understanding” when they made the
original agreement that Jack could “pay [himself] out of the student loans and figure regular
child support and expenses for Kinsley.” Instead, Jack wanted to pay $1,700 per month to
Lori, with the provision that this figure could not be reduced until Lori paid off the student
loans, for which she was solely responsible.9 Lori explained she structured the agreement
in this manner because the loans were in her name and she did not want to default if Jack did
not pay her. Additionally, contrary to Jack’s statement, Lori testified that while she was in
a four-year program, she only attended law school for three years, with a total cost of
$74,000, making Jack’s calculations on appeal incorrect.
9
We also cannot say, as Jack does, that because the chancellor modified the $1,700
figure, he made a finding of overreaching by Lori. Neither the testimony nor the evidence
pointed to this allegation.
12
¶21. The only error we find is the chancellor’s attributing $30,500 as Jack’s share of the
student-loan debt for joint living expenses, based upon his improper substitution of
$135,000 for $130,000 in total student-loan debt. Due to the chancellor’s miscalculation of
the original amount of debt, we reverse and render judgment for Lori in the amount of
$28,000 for Jack’s share of the student-loan debt.
3. Attorney’s Fees
¶22. Jack argues that the $1,000 award in attorney’s fees to Lori was improper because
there was no finding of willful contempt. We agree. While an award of attorney’s fees is
proper in a contempt case and “largely entrusted to the sound discretion of the chancellor,”
the court “must first consider whether a party willfully violated the court’s order.” Price,
5 So. 3d at 1158 (¶19) (citations omitted). Here, there was no finding that Jack willfully
violated the court’s order. In fact, the chancellor specifically stated that while Jack was in
contempt of court, he was not in willful contempt. The evidence presented at the hearing
supports this finding. Jack could not pay his financial obligations due to his employment
issues, and when he did obtain extra money due to the sale of his mother’s general store, he
paid Lori the $25,000 in arrearage. While Lori cites testimony from the modification
hearing to support her claim that Jack was in willful contempt, we do not find it sufficient
to overturn the chancellor’s finding that Jack’s contempt was not willful. Accordingly, we
reverse and render the $1,000 award of attorney’s fees to Lori.
¶23. THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CARROLL COUNTY,
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT, IS AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED AND
13
RENDERED IN PART. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE
APPELLANT.
LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., ISHEE, CARLTON, FAIR, JAMES
AND GREENLEE, JJ., CONCUR. WILSON, J., CONCURS IN PART AND
DISSENTS IN PART WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
14