MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be FILED
regarded as precedent or cited before any
court except for the purpose of establishing Oct 13 2017, 9:02 am
the defense of res judicata, collateral CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
estoppel, or the law of the case. Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
Jeffry G. Price Rebecca R. Vent
Peru, Indiana McIntyre Hilligoss Vent O’Keefe &
Welke
Kokomo, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Lora L. (Padilla) Goodman, October 13, 2017
Appellant-Petitioner, Court of Appeals Case No.
52A05-1701-DR-203
v. Appeal from the Miami Superior
Court
Carlos J. Padilla, The Honorable J. David Grund,
Appellee-Plaintiff. Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
52D01-10-DR-348
Brown, Judge.
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[1] Lora L. (Padilla) Goodman (“Mother”) appeals the trial court’s order that
Carlos J. Padilla (“Father”) is not required to make any further child support
and college expense payments due to overpayment. She raises two issues
which we consolidate and restate as whether the trial court erred in determining
that Father paid the child support judgments against him and in granting
Father’s petition for the elimination of college expenses. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] Mother and Father are the parents of three adult children: Caleb, born August
13, 1991, Jessa, born November 8, 1993, and Silas, born October 16, 1995
(collectively, the “Children”). In October 2000, Mother filed a petition for
dissolution of marriage, and a provisional order approved by the court on
October 12, 2000, ordered Father to pay $250 per week in child support.
[3] In July 2003, the court entered a decree of dissolution ordering Father to pay
child support to Mother in the amount of $285.09 per week beginning July 17,
2003. The court ordered Father to pay 15% of his gross overtime pay in
addition to the weekly child support payment and made this payment
retroactive to August 24, 2001. The court also ordered Father to provide
health, dental, optical, prescription, and orthodontia insurance for the Children
through his employer and pay 73% of these expenses and non-prescription and
health care expenses not otherwise paid by health insurance exceeding
$1,026.48 annually. It ordered Father to pay $12,609.62 with interest of 8% per
year until paid in full.
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[4] On March 26, 2004, the court issued a judgment against Father in the amount
of $14,630.02, which included $10,617.76 in arrears for non-payment of
overtime income for the period of August 2001 to February 29, 2004, $1,878.67
for the Children’s orthodontic work, and expenses related to Mother attending
the hearing and her attorney fees in the amount of $2,133.59.
[5] On March 4, 2010, the court found Father in contempt in part for failure: to
provide Mother notification of change in medical insurance coverage; keep
Children covered with health, dental, orthodontic and optical insurance; and
pay his percentage share of uninsured medical expenses for the period of 2004
to 2006. As sanction for this finding, Father was ordered to pay the sum of
$13,428.03 for the following expenses: $72.96 for 2004 medical expenses;
$4,449.63 for 2006 medical expenses; $169.58 for medical expenses incurred by
Mother for his failure to provide insurance cards; $7,654.77 in uninsured
medical expenses resulting in his not maintaining health insurance for Children;
and $1,081.09 for 2009 medical expenses. It ordered Father to pay Mother’s
attorney fees in the amount of $3,000. The court also found that “the judgment
calculation regarding the Court’s previous judgment totaling $8,365.11 is the
correct judgment calculation as of February 4, 2010.” Appellant’s Appendix
Volume II at 55.
[6] An entry dated July 22, 2010, in the chronological case summary indicates that
the court entered an order modifying Father’s child support to $187 per week
beginning January 15, 2010, and finding that Father owed a child support
arrearage to Mother in the amount of $8,059.52 as of April 28, 2010. The entry
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also indicates that the court ordered Father to pay Mother’s attorney fees in the
amount of $2,000 within 180 days of the order’s date.
[7] On February 9, 2011, Mother filed a Release of Judgment acknowledging the
receipt of payment in full from Father of the July 22, 2010 judgment pursuant
to which Father was to pay Mother $8,059.52 in principal plus interest. The
release stated that it “[i]n no way . . . serve[s] as a release of the July 17, 2003
judgment or the March 4, 2010 judgment that also were entered against
[Father] and in favor of [Mother] . . . .” Id. at 56.
[8] A document titled “ORDER,” dated August 25, 2011, and signed only by
Father, states that Mother and Father were both in agreement that Father owed
$11,637 for Caleb’s 2011-2012 college expenses, that Father agreed to make
payment arrangements with Goshen College to pay $3,137 by May 20, 2012,
and that Father agreed to pay the remaining $8,500 to repay Caleb’s loans taken
out for Father’s portion by making minimum payments of $215 by the fifteenth
of every month to Mother until paid in full, with such payments not beginning
until June 15, 2012. Id. at 58.
[9] An Agreed Order Book Entry dated October 13, 2013 signed by the parties’
attorneys and the trial court states that Caleb turned twenty-one and was
effectively emancipated, Jessa turned nineteen and was also effectively
emancipated, and that Caleb and Jessa were attending college. The entry stated
Father’s weekly child support order should be modified to $143 per week
beginning November 10, 2012; following Silas’s emancipation, Father’s
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“weekly payment of $125.00 shall continue” to be withheld from Father’s pay
as a garnishment and applied to his outstanding judgments beginning with the
application of payments to the July 13, 2003 judgment; Father’s arrearage as of
July 1, 2013, was $2,133 and that this amount gave Father credit for all
payments made through the child support clerk and the difference in payment
amounts of $187 to $125 from November 9, 2012 to July 1, 2013; Father would
not be required to make payments toward outstanding judgments until Silas’s
emancipation; and Father would pay one-half, but no more than $2,000 per
semester for Caleb and Jessa each towards their college expenses as well as
continuing to make monthly payments of $215 for Caleb’s outstanding college
loan “per the ‘Order’ signed by Father on August 25, 2011. Id. at 60.
[10] On June 19, 2013, Mother filed a petition to renew judgment.1 On November
22, 2013, the court granted Mother’s petition to renew judgment and stated that
it granted Mother’s request “to renew the Judgment entered against [Father] in
the amount of $12,609.62 on July 17, 2013 and in favor of [Mother]. Therefore,
the balance of this Judgment is $4,981.47 as of June 17, 2013.” Id. at 63.
[11] An Agreed Order Book Entry dated September 26, 2014, states: Father would
“pay one-half of Silas’ post-secondary education expenses after all grants and
scholarships are applied the first year and then one-half but no more than
$2,500 per following semester”; Father would “pay his part of college expenses
1
The record does not contain a copy of Mother’s petition.
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after being provided documentation of his portion in an amount of $250 each
week”; Father’s “regular child support will cease”; and Father owed $5,908.02
for Caleb and Jessa’s college expenses. Id. at 67-68.
[12] On March 6, 2015, the court entered an Amended Agreed Order Book Entry
signed by both parties, which provides in part:
1. [Father] agrees to, in support/maintenance of the child; pay
one-half of all Silas’ post-secondary education expenses after all
grants and scholarships are applied the first year and then one-
half but no more than $2,500 per following semester after all
grants and scholarships are applied.
2. [Father] agrees to pay his part of the college expenses after
being provided documentation of his portion in an amount of
$250.00 each week, beginning Friday, August 15, 2014 . . . .
3. [Father’s] regular child support will cease after the signing of
this order, and no modification will be made retroactive due to
[Mother’s] short term disability.
4. [Father] agrees he owes $5,908.02 for Caleb and Jessa’s
college expenses for Fall 2013 and Spring 2014 semesters.
[Father] will deliver $3,000.00 in two checks in the amount of
$2,000.00 for one and $1,000.00 for the other, to [Mother] no
later than Friday, August 15, 2014, and September 1, 2014, to be
applied to these outstanding college expenses for Caleb and
Jessa, with credit to be given to [Father]. Thereafter, this amount
would be reduced to a judgment in support/maintenance of the
children.
5. [Father] agrees that a weekly payment of $150.00 by
EFT/ACH from his bank account to [Mother]’s bank account be
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withheld from his pay as a garnishment and applied to [Father’s]
outstanding judgments . . . .
6. [Father] agrees that the first $1,000 from his annual federal tax
refund starting in 2014 as well as the first $1,000 from any
bonuses received from his employer will be relinquished to
[Mother] within 5 days of receipt.
7. [Mother] will provide any significant college communication
or information including grades for each of the children to
[Father] within one week of receipt.
8. [Father] agrees if he does not comply with any agreement in
this order and other prior orders, he will be responsible for
[Mother’s] attorney fees in attempts to rectify the situation(s).
Id. at 64-65.2
[13] In a letter delivered to Father on November 20, 2015, Mother wrote that “[i]t
will be a while before I can get Silas’ spring college expenses to you,” that she
“may just wait until Silas’ contract is up on his apartment,” and “[t]his will give
me time to refigure all his expenses and I will then have all his utility bills to
have a total for everything instead of submitting expenses to you every month.”
2
The Amended Agreed Order Book Entry contains signatures by Father’s attorney and Mother and the date
listed by each signature is February 27, 2015. The Amended Agreed Order Book Entry also states: “SO
ORDERED this 6 day of March, 2014.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 66. The chronological case
summary contains an entry dated March 12, 2015, which states: “Amended Agreed Order Book Entry
submitted and APPROVED on March 6, 2015.” Id. at 32. Father notes in his brief that the date of March 6,
2014, instead of 2015 constitutes a scrivener’s error. We agree.
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Petitioner’s Exhibit 9. Mother also wrote “if you’d rather me send you bits and
pieces as I get them, let me know.” Id.
[14] On December 3, 2015, Father filed a Petition to Determine Child Support and
College Expense Payments and Arrearages and Petition for Reduction or
Elimination of College Expenses. On January 28, 2016, Mother petitioned the
court to hold Father in contempt.3
[15] On September 28, 2016, a hearing was held and the court heard testimony from
Mother and Father. Mother testified that Jessa was married, has one child, and
was enrolled in the Indiana College of Sports and Medical Massage, and that
Jessa and her husband lived with her. She testified that Silas graduated from
high school in 2014, completed two years of college, but was not enrolled
because she “needed to pay on something for him and I told him he needed to
wait a little bit . . . .” Transcript at 8. She testified that she wanted Father to
pay college expenses for Jessa and Silas and a past college loan related to Caleb,
but was not asking for any future college expenses for Caleb. She stated that
she provided information on college expenses to Father in August 2015 after
she had complications from brain surgery, that she sent a certified letter in
November 2015 informing Father of her illness and her intention of providing
documentation to him of the Children’s college expenses in the future. She
3
The record does not contain a copy of Father’s December 3, 2015 petition or Mother’s petition to hold
Father in contempt.
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testified that she communicated with Father about college expenses on
September 26, 2016.
[16] Father testified that he received an email from Mother detailing additional
college expenses in August 2015 and again the Monday prior to the hearing.
He testified that he paid $238,697.43, that he should have paid $179,980, and
that he overpaid $58,717. He stated that Silas has a different last name than
him, that he does not have a relationship with the Children, and that they have
not called him for Father’s Day, his birthday, or Christmas. On cross-
examination, Father stated that he had not tried to contact his Children. He
stated that he completed the counseling mentioned in the divorce decree, and
when asked, “[b]ut you didn’t restart your visitation with the children,” Father
answered, “No they were out of state.” Id. at 25. When asked, “[b]ut haven’t
they been back in the State of Indiana for quite some time,” Father answered
affirmatively. Id. He testified that he stopped paying Mother for college
expenses at some point and continued to have the ability to pay.
[17] On December 22, 2016, the court entered an order stating in part:
The court, having considered the testimony and evidence
presented by the parties, the prior history of the case and
applicable law, now finds as follows:
*****
3. The Dissolution Decree entered a judgment against Father in
the sum of $12,609.62. The judgment docket maintained by the
Miami County Clerk of Court shows this judgment satisfied May
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19, 2009, yet due to interest, was renewed in the sum of
$4,981.47 on November 22, 2013.
4. On March 26, 2004, Father was found to be in arrears for the
non-payment of overtime earnings between 2001 and 2004 in the
sum of $10,617.76, plus orthodontic work for the children in the
sum of $1,878.67, for a total of $12,496.43. Father satisfied the
total amount due by transferring said funds by QDRO on
November 22, 2004.
5. On February 4, 2010, the court entered two judgments against
Father. The first judgment was for $13,428.03. The second
judgment was for $8,365.11, for a total of $21,793.14. Father
satisfied the second judgment in the sum of $8,365.11 on
1/18/11 by paying $8,400 as evidenced by the child support
payment history introduced into evidence in Father’s Exhibit A.
6. On August 25, 2011, the parties agreed Father would pay
Caleb’s college loans in the sum of $8,500 at the rate of $215 per
month, paid directly to Mother. This amount having never been
ordered by the court. Father satisfied this amount as evidenced
by checks Father paid directly to Mother and introduced into
evidence in Father’s Exhibit A.
7. On October 25, 2013, the court entered an order for a
judgment on child support in the sum of $2,133. Father satisfied
this amount by overpaying his child support obligation as
evidenced by the child support payment history introduced into
evidence in Father’s Exhibit A.
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8. On March 6, 2015,[4] the court entered an order for judgment
on Caleb and Jessa’s college expenses in the sum of $5,908.02.
Father agreed to satisfy this amount by paying two checks in the
amount of $2,000 and $1,000 by August 15, 2014 and the
remaining balance of $2,908.02 to be paid at the rate of $150 per
week. Father satisfied the two oldest children’s college expenses
in the sum of $5,908.02 by paying Mother directly as evidenced
by the records in Father’s Exhibit A.
9. In addition to the above agreements, orders and judgments,
Father also owed weekly child support for all three children in
the sum of $285.00 from July 17, 2003 through July 22, 2010 for
a total of $105,768.39. Father owed child support for two of the
three children in the sum of $187 per week from July 23, 2010
through November 10, 2012 for a total of $22,253. Father then
owed $143 per week for one child from November 11, 2012
through October 16, 2014 for a total of $14,443. Father’s total
child support obligation between July 17, 2003 (Dissolution
Decree) and October 16, 2014 (Silas’s emancipation) totaled
$142,464.39. The Court established in its’ [sic] order of October
25, 2013 that Father had a child support arrearage of $2,133.00 as
of July 1, 2013. The order of October 25, 2013 was the last order
addressing Father’s support arrearage and established the overall
support arrearage amount going forward for purposes of
calculation.
10. The total amount due by Father for judgments, agreements,
and court orders was $55,925.25.
4
Mother asserts in her brief that the trial court’s December 22, 2016 order erroneously referred to this order
as being entered on March 6, 2015. As previously noted, based upon the date listed by each signature of
February 27, 2015, and the entry in the chronological case summary dated March 12, 2015, we conclude that
the date of 2014 in the March 6th order appears to have been a scrivener’s error.
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11. The court finds the total due by Father for child support
beginning July 1, 2013 date of last arrearage calculation was
$11,428.00 plus judgments and court orders in the sum of
$24,317.52, for a total amount owed by Father in the sum of
$35,745.52.
12. The child support payment history from the Miami County
Clerk of Court showed on pages 1-22 that Father paid
$124,174.64. The child support payment history from the Miami
County Clerk of Court showed on pages 22-33 that Father paid
an additional $69,123.17. The judgment docket maintained by
the Miami County Clerk of the Court showed that Father paid a
total of $22,091.62 to Mother. The total amount Father paid
through the Miami County Clerk was $215,389.43.
13. In addition to the funds paid through the Miami County
Clerk’s Office, Father also paid Mother either directly or through
electronic funds transfer the total sum of $28,600. None of these
payments, either made through the Clerk of the Court or directly
to Mother, were disputed by Mother and were admitted into
evidence through Father’s Exhibit A.
14. When subtracting Father’s payments through the Clerk of
the Court and what he paid directly to Mother from what Father
owed, the court finds Father is overpaid in the sum $36,598.60.
A summary as to the court’s calculations is attached hereto.
15. The court finds [Father] has satisfied all judgments with
interest, all child support and all college expenses incurred by the
children.
16. The court finds that there has been a substantial change of
circumstances warranting modification of the Court’s orders for
the following reasons: Father owes no further college expenses
for the children in that the two oldest children are married. All
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three children have not attended college for significant periods of
time. The middle child, Jessa, enrolled in post-secondary
education currently is married and a housewife. Furthermore,
Mother was obligated to provide Father with the children’s
grades and college expenses as set forth in their March 6, 2015
Agreement, yet she failed to do so after the Spring Semester of
2015. None of the children have a relationship with their father
and do not communicate with him in any fashion. The children
did not include him in their choice for college, did not keep him
informed of their educational goals or pursuits, did not provide
him with their grades. Father’s Petition for the Elimination of
College Expenses is granted. Father is relieved of any future
obligation to contribute to his adult children’s college expenses
for the reasons stated.
17. Mother filed a citation alleging Father failed to pay college
expenses per the Court’s order. The Court finds that Father
voluntarily and intentionally discontinued making the required
payments without Court order relieving him of the obligation
while having income to pay the same. The Court finds Father in
Contempt for this willful violation of the Court’s order. The
Court orders Father to pay $1000.00 in Mother’s attorney fees to
attorney Elizabeth Price as a sanction and to purge himself of
contempt. This payment to be made within 90 days. Although
Mother never filed anything in writing, Mother verbally
requested the court to order Father to pay a portion of Jessa’s
expenses for massage school. That request is also denied for the
reasons stated above.
Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 82-86. The court attached a document to
the order providing a summary of Father’s obligations, a summary of Father’s
payments, and acknowledging the agreement between the parties.
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Discussion
[18] The issue is whether the trial court erred in determining Father paid the child
support judgments and in granting his petition for the elimination of college
expenses. Where, as here, the trial court issued findings of fact and
conclusions, we apply a two-tiered standard of review. Quinn v. Quinn, 62
N.E.3d 1212, 1220 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016). First, we determine whether the
evidence supports the findings, and second, whether the findings support the
judgment. Id. The trial court’s findings are controlling unless the record
includes no facts to support them either directly or by inference. Id. Legal
conclusions, however, are reviewed de novo. Id. We set aside a trial court’s
judgment only if it is clearly erroneous. Id. “Clear error occurs when our
review of the evidence most favorable to the judgment leaves us firmly
convinced that a mistake has been made.” Id.
[19] Mother argues that this court’s confidence that the findings are the result of a
considered judgment is eroded because the trial court adopted, wholesale, the
findings and conclusions offered by Father. Under the heading, “STANDARD
OF REVIEW,” Mother points to a number of alleged errors in the trial court’s
order. Appellant’s Brief at 14. She contends that the trial court’s conclusion
that Father had satisfied all judgments with interest and all child support and
college expenses was clearly erroneous. Mother argues that the trial court’s
finding that Father had overpaid directly contradicted the court’s finding that
Father was in contempt. She asserts that the purpose of child support is to
provide regular and uninterrupted support for the children and that voluntary
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overpayments are properly treated as gratuities to the children and no credit is
granted. She also contends that Father’s exhibit and proposed order and
ultimately the court’s order ignored the October 12, 2000 Agreed Entry in
which the court ordered Father to pay $250 per week.
[20] Father asserts that the trial court’s order differs in several respects from his
proposed order, and he argues that it is not surprising that the court followed
his proposed order with respect to further college expenses because it was
undisputed that the two oldest children were married and both had been college
dropouts for a significant period of time. He also argues that Mother admitted
she failed to provide the Children’s grades and college expenses as she was
mandated to do in the March 6, 2015 order. He contends that the court’s
calculations were supported by his bank records and records from the Miami
County Clerk. He also argues that the court properly found that there was a
substantial change in circumstances warranting the termination of his duty to
continue supporting his adult children’s education.
[21] To the extent Mother argues that the court adopted Father’s proposed findings
and conclusions wholesale, we observe that generally “[a]lthough we do not
apply an altered standard of review when a trial court adopts a party’s findings
verbatim, ‘near verbatim reproductions may appropriately justify cautious
appellate scrutiny.’” Carpenter v. Carpenter, 891 N.E.2d 587, 593 (Ind. Ct. App.
2008) (quoting Stevens v. State, 770 N.E.2d 739, 762 (Ind. 2002), reh’g denied, cert.
denied, 540 U.S. 830, 124 S. Ct. 69 (2003)). We also observe that the court’s
December 22, 2016 order altered Father’s proposed findings in a number of
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ways including: the amount Father paid according to the Miami County Clerk;
the amount Father paid through electronic funds transfer; and the amount
Father overpaid. The court also found Father in contempt and ordered him to
pay $1,000 for Mother’s attorney fees.
[22] Mother appears to challenge the court’s finding that a judgment was renewed in
the sum of $4,981.47 on November 22, 2013. However, the record reveals that
the court granted Mother’s petition to renew judgment on November 22, 2013,
and stated that it granted Mother’s request “to renew the Judgment entered
against [Father] in the amount of $12,609.62 on July 17, 2013 and in favor of
[Mother]. Therefore, the balance of this Judgment is $4,981.47 as of June 17,
2013.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 63.
[23] Mother points to Petitioner’s Exhibit 13, which includes a spreadsheet with two
rows containing information and lists an amount of $8,059.52 as a “Balance.”
Petitioner’s Exhibit 13. After pointing to Petitioner’s Exhibit 13, Mother then
states: “Therefore, the trial court has miscalculated the college expense that
[Father] should have paid and has erred, as a matter of law, in determining that
he overpaid his obligation for the children.” Appellant’s Brief at 20. We
cannot say that Petitioner’s Exhibit 13 renders the court’s order clearly
erroneous. We also observe that Father testified that he believed he overpaid in
terms of college expenses and child support and that the court admitted Father’s
Exhibit A as a summary of his testimony.
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[24] With respect to Mother’s argument that the trial court’s finding that Father had
overpaid contradicted its finding that Father was in contempt, we observe that
this Court has previously held that “child support payments cannot be applied
prospectively to support not yet due at the time of the overpayment.” Drwecki v.
Drwecki, 782 N.E.2d 440, 448 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003) (quoting Matson v. Matson,
569 N.E.2d 732, 733 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991)).
The rationale behind the rule is that it would be unjust for a non-
custodial parent to voluntarily build up a substantial credit and
then suddenly refuse to make support payments for a period of
time. This would thwart the court’s purpose of providing
regular, uninterrupted income for the benefit of the children. The
regularity and continuity of court decreed support payments are
as important as the overall dollar amount of those payments.
Id. at 448-449 (quoting Matson, 569 N.E.2d at 733). Mother does not argue or
point to the record to show that Father improperly paid more than he was
required to pay under certain court orders or improperly built up a substantial
credit. We note that the trial court did not order Father to recoup any excess
payments.5
[25] As for Mother’s argument that the trial court failed to account for the October
12, 2000 order to pay child support and improperly began its calculation of
Father’s child support with the July 2013 finding of arrearage of $2,133, we
observe that the Agreed Order Book Entry dated October 13, 2013, stated that
5
Father does not appeal the finding of contempt.
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“[a]s of July 1, 2013, [Father’s] current arrearage is $2,133.00.” Appellant’s
Appendix at Volume II at 60.
[26] Mother also asserts that the trial court notes judgments for two of the children’s
college expenses in the amount of $5,908.02 and that the court noted at the
bottom of the same attachment that Father was required to pay $8,500 for
Caleb’s college loans. Mother does not appear to argue that these amounts are
incorrect,6 but contends that “[y]et, incredibly, the trial court concluded that
[Father] had paid all amounts which he owed for the children’s college
expenses.” Appellant’s Brief at 24. The trial court’s order refers to the amount
of $8,500 and states that “Father satisfied this amount as evidenced by checks
paid directly to Mother and introduced into evidence in Father’s Exhibit A.”
Id. at 83. We cannot say that Mother has developed a cogent argument
regarding how the court’s inclusion of these amounts in the summary sheet
attached to the order conflicts with its conclusion that Father has satisfied all
judgments or that the checks included in Respondent’s Exhibit A did not
support the court’s finding. Accordingly, this argument is waived.
6
The amounts appear to have support in the record. The August 25, 2011 document signed by Father states
that he agreed “to pay remaining $8,500, to repay Caleb’s loans . . . .” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at
58. The March 6, 2015 Amended Agreed Order Book Entry provided that Father “agrees he owes $5,908.02
for Caleb and Jessa’s college expenses for Fall 2013 and Spring 2014 semesters.” Id. at 65.
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[27] Mother argues that the trial court made no mention in its order or attached
summary of Father’s obligations to assist in the college expenses for Silas. In
the March 6, 2015 Amended Agreed Order Book Entry, the court found that
Father agreed to “pay one-half of all Silas’ post-secondary education expenses
after all grants and scholarships are applied the first year and then one-half but
no more than $2,500 per following semester after all grants and scholarships are
applied.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 64. The order also stated that
Father “agrees to pay his part of the college expenses after being provided
documentation of his portion in an amount of $250.00 each week, beginning
Friday, August 15, 2014.” Id. at 64 (emphasis added). At the hearing, Mother
testified that the last time Silas was enrolled in school was spring of 2016. On
cross-examination, she indicated that she had not provided Father with any
documentation regarding what he needed to pay since August 2015 and that
she did not receive a court order extending the time that she could have to
provide him with the information. Father testified that he paid Mother an
amount for Silas’s college expenses through March 2016 despite the fact he had
not received any verification of Silas’s college expenses for the spring semester.
We cannot say that the trial court clearly erred in finding that the judgment had
been satisfied. Nor can we say that Mother has demonstrated that the court
erred in finding that Father overpaid in the sum $36,598.60.
[28] With respect to Mother’s assertion that the court’s conclusion that Father was
not required to pay future college expenses was clearly erroneous, we observe
that Ind. Code § 31-16-6-2 “gives guidance regarding contribution toward post-
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secondary educational expenses, listing certain factors to take into account,
such as ‘the child’s aptitude and ability,’ ‘the child’s reasonable ability to
contribute to educational expenses,’ and ‘the ability of each parent to meet
these expenses,’ among other things.” Hirsch v. Oliver, 970 N.E.2d 651, 660
(Ind. 2012). “Child Support Guideline 8(b) lists expenses that may be included
within a post-secondary educational expense order, such as tuition, books, lab
fees, supplies, student activity fees, room and board under certain
circumstances, transportation, car insurance, clothing, entertainment, and
incidental expenses.” Id. at 661. “This guideline also explicitly states that ‘[i]t
is discretionary with the court to award post-secondary educational expenses
and in what amount.’” Id. (quoting Child Supp. G. 8(b)). It continues that the
court should “weigh the ability of each parent to contribute to payment of the
expense, as well as the ability of the student to pay a portion of the expense.”
Child Supp. G. 8(b).
[29] The modification of a child support order is governed by Ind. Code § 31-16-8-1,
which provides that modification may be made “upon a showing of changed
circumstances so substantial and continuing as to make the terms unreasonable
. . . .” “Generally, provisions for the payment of educational expenses are also
modifiable because educational expenses are in the nature of child support.”
Svenstrup v. Svenstrup, 981 N.E.2d 138, 145 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012) (citing Martin v.
Martin, 495 N.E.2d 523, 525 (Ind. 1986) (“Because Ind. Code § 31-1-11.5-17
[now Ind. Code § 31-16-8-1] expressly permits modification of ‘an order with
respect to child support,’ we hold that educational support orders not only
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continue following emancipation and age 21, but also are subject to further
modification.”).
[30] The record reveals that Jessa was married and her husband worked full-time.
Silas was not in college at the time of the hearing. Moreover, in light of
Father’s overpayment of $36,598.60 and our determination that Mother has not
demonstrated that Father improperly paid more than he was required to pay or
improperly built up a substantial credit, we cannot say that the trial court’s
order was clearly erroneous.
Conclusion
[31] For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s order.
[32] Affirmed.
May, J., and Pyle J., concur.
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