D'Arezzo v. D'Arezzo

Decision Date21 July 1970
Docket NumberNo. 883-M,883-M
PartiesJoan A. D'AREZZO v. Louis D'AREZZO. P.
CourtRhode Island Supreme Court
OPINION

KELLEHER, Justice.

This is a petition for certiorari filed by a wife to review the action of the Family Court in reducing a support order contained in an interlocutory decree. We issued the writ and pursuant thereto the pertinent record has been certified to this court.

The parties were married on April 15, 1961. There were two children born of the marriage, Cheryl, age six, and Lori, age five. On May 21, 1968, petitioner filed a petition in the Family Court for relief without commencement of divorce proceedings together with a motion asking for temporary support and custody of the children pending a hearing on the merits of the petition. On June 10, 1968, a consent decree was entered whereby the wife was given custody of the children and exclusive use of the marital domicile. The husband agreed to pay the sum of $70 a week for support and maintenance of the wife and children. The decree specifically stated that the support order was without prejudice to the litigants' right to reopen the question of support. Since the time of the entry of the decree, the parties have returned to the Family Court numerous times either on the wife's motion to adjudge her husband in contempt for his failure to obey the court decrees or on his motions for a reduction in the amount of the support order. In August 1968, after a hearing on one of the husband's motions to modify, a decree was entered reducing the weekly support payment from $70 to $60. Later, in October 1968, respondent husband was adjudged to be in contempt of the August decree. In May 1969, the husband's motion to reduce the $60 support payment was denied.

The parties returned to Family Court on October 10, 1969. The husband was once again trying to lower the support payment. The wife was asking for counsel fees and that her husband be ordered to reinstate Blue Cross coverage for herself and the children. The trial justice ordered the husband to provide the requested Blue Cross protection and awarded the wife's counsel a fee of $300 payable in four months. The trial court also reduced the weekly payment due petitioner from $60 to $45. This reduction is the subject of the instant petition.

At the last hearing, the husband told the court that his expenses had increased since the last time he sought a reduction in the support order. He attributed the bulk of the increase to the fact that where he had previously lived with his parents and paid them $10 a week, the parents had sold their home and moved to Florida. The husband thereupon rented what the trial justice described as a 'plush' apartment. The apartment rent was $120 a month. A new telephone was installed in the apartment at a cost to respondent of $7.50 each month. The husband went on to tell about other increases in the cost of his living. On cross-examination, it was made obvious that respondent, at the prior hearing on his motion to modify, had been less than honest with reference to the expenses he testified to on that occasion.

The law applicable to the husband's motion is well established in a long line of cases. 1 A decree fixing the amount to be paid for the support of a wife and/or children settles the rights of the parties until there has been a change of circumstances sufficient to warrant a modification of the order. Any decree which reduces an outstanding order for support should reflect a reasonable relationship between the reduced capacity to pay and the needs of those receiving the support. A husband who seeks modification of an outstanding order for support has the burden of proving by a fair preponderance of the evidence that, since the entry of the decree to be reviewed, a change of circumstances has occurred which warrants a reduction as to the amount of money to be paid for the benefit of those he is bound to support.

The trial justice found that the wife's needs were at least the same, if not greater than they were at the time of the entry of the decree under review. He also found that the husband was earning the same amount of money as he was when the decree ordering the $60 weekly support was entered. The respondent's salary is and was approximately $112 a week. While the trial justice found that the husband's living expenses had been increased by $6 a week, he failed to relate the husband's capacity to pay to the needs of his wife and children. Instead, in ordering a $15 reduction in weekly payments, he chose to ignore our established change of circumstances rule, and in fashioning a rule of his own for determining the whys and wherefores which will justify a...

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32 cases
  • State v. Presler
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • June 11, 1999
    ...opinions of this Court declare the law in Rhode Island, and lower courts must follow that law as announced); D'Arezzo v. D'Arezzo, 107 R.I. 422, 426, 267 A.2d 683, 685 (1970) (same); 18 Moore's Federal Practice § 134.51[2][b] at 134-51 (3d ed. 1998) ("The decision of an appellate court on a......
  • State v. Lopez
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Superior Court
    • April 2, 2018
    ...even though they may disagree with the wisdom or soundness of our declarations, to follow the law as we announce it. D'Arezzo v. D'Arezzo, 107 R.I. 422, 267 A.2d 683 (1970). Such adherence to the precedents declared by the highest tribunal in the state is inherent in our system of jurisprud......
  • Corrado v. Providence Redevelopment Agency
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • March 7, 1977
    ...the laws of this state, within the limits prescribed by our state and federal constitutions, is this court. See D'Arezzo v. D'Arezzo, 107 R.I. 422, 426, 267 A.2d 683, 685 (1970). However, the invalidity of the ground upon which the capitalization of income testimony was admitted does not re......
  • Sams Food Mart, LLC v. Town of Middletown
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Superior Court
    • October 30, 2018
    ...leaves this Court with no option other than to find the Tobacco Ordinance's licensing provision invalid. See D'Arezzo v. D'Arezzo, 107 R.I. 422, 426-27, 267 A.2d 683, 685 (1970) ("[A]n opinion declares the law and the law thus announced becomes a precedent which must be followed by any infe......
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