Hays v. Alexander

Decision Date06 June 2013
Docket NumberNo. 2011–CA–01890–SCT.,2011–CA–01890–SCT.
Citation114 So.3d 704
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesMari Lynn HAYS (Alexander) and Lon Frederick Alexander, II, by and through his Conservator, Mari Lynn Hays v. Lon Frederick ALEXANDER.

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Sarah Ann Ellis, James D. Bell, Jackson, attorneys for appellants.

T. Jackson Lyons, Jackson, attorney for appellee.

EN BANC.

RANDOLPH, Presiding Justice, for the Court:

¶ 1. Before the Court is an appeal of a motion for contempt and modification of alimony and child support first filed by Mari Lynn Hays, 1 and later amended to include Mari Lynn in her capacity as conservator for Lon Frederick Alexander, II (Rick), seeking unpaid alimony and child-support payments and additional financial support from her former husband, Lon Frederick Alexander (Lon), for the couple's adult son, Rick. Mari Lynn claims that the chancery court erred by failing to: (1) require Lon to pay additional alimony and/or child support after Rick had reached the age of majority; or (2) require Lon to make payments into a conservatorship to support Rick after Rick attained the age of majority. We find that the chancery court did not abuse its discretion by declining to require Lon to provide post-majority financial support for Rick, for state law does not vest our Court with the authority to mandate that parents financially support their offspring post-majority. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the chancery court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Mari Lynn and Lon were married in 1986, and their only child, Rick, was born in December 1987. On August 2, 2001, Mari Lynn filed a “Complaint for Divorce on Ground of Irreconcilable Differences” in the Hinds County Chancery Court. On October 17, 2002, the chancery court issued a “Judgment of Divorce—Irreconcilable Differences” incorporating Mari Lynn's and Lon's “Agreement for Custody and Maintenance of Child and Settlement of Property Rights” (“the agreement”). At that time, Rick was fourteen years old.

¶ 3. The agreement provided that Mari Lynn and Lon would have joint legal custody. Mari Lynn would have primary physical custody. Lon would have weekend visitation. Lon was to pay Mari Lynn $1,500 each month “for the support and maintenance of the minor child” and maintain health insurance covering Rick. (Emphasis added.) The parties were to share equally all reasonable medical expenses. Lon also agreed to pay all of Rick's private school expenses and college-education expenses through a baccalaureate degree, so long as Rick was actively pursuing a degree and maintaining a 2.50 grade-point average. The agreement further provided that Lon was to pay lump-sum alimony of $100,000 to Mari Lynn in four payments of $25,000, and installment alimony of $9,500 each month for one-hundred-eight months.

¶ 4. On October 26, 2010, Mari Lynn filed a Motion for Modification, and Motion for Contempt[,] alleging that Lon was in arrears in alimony, medical, and college-expense payments under the agreement, and seeking additional financial support from Lon due to Rick's medical conditions. At that time, Rick was less than two months shy of his twenty-third birthday, well past the age of majority. Mari Lynn requested that the chancellor extend Lon's alimony payments or require him to reinstate child-support payments past the age of majority.

¶ 5. On April 21, 2011, the chancellor held a hearing on Mari Lynn's modification and contempt claims. At the close of the hearing, the chancellor asked for briefs regarding “why and how I could modify the alimony as well as the child support and what basis I should do it under. And I would like for y'all to get together and submit to me what you think is owed in alimony from both sides. And I will pick a number if y'all can't agree on something.” Thereafter, Mari Lynn provided that Lon owed $59,000 in past-due alimony, had not paid Rick's college tuition for the fall of 2010, and had not paid half of Rick's medical expenses.2

¶ 6. On May 31, 2011, the chancellor ordered Lon to pay Rick's outstanding college expenses, as required by his agreement. On June 15, 2011, the chancellor permitted Mari Lynn, in her capacity as Rick's conservator, to be added as a party plaintiff.3 On June 29, 2011, the court entered an order declining to find Lon in contempt, based on its findings that Lon had paid half of Rick's medical bills until Rick reached the age of majority, as required by the divorce decree; Lon had reasonably believed that Rick's delay in returning to college relieved him of his duty to continue paying Rick's tuition; and Lon had demonstrated an inability to pay an increase in alimony. The chancellor ordered Lon to reimburse Mari Lynn $1,083.15 for his portion of Rick's college expenses for the fall semester of 2010, which Mari Lynn had paid, and found that Mari Lynn was entitled to a judgment against Lon in the amount of $59,000 for past-due alimony. However, the chancellor declined to require Lon to make child-support payments in futuro for Rick, finding no legal basis for an action, brought by one parent against the other, seeking post-majority support payments.

¶ 7. On July 11, 2011, Mari Lynn filed a motion to amend the motion for modification to reflect her status as Rick's conservator, and to request—in addition to her requests for continued alimony and child—support payments—that the chancellor require Lon “to provide support directly to [Rick], through his Conservator....” On December 9, 2011, the chancellor entered an order, inter alia, addressing Mari Lynn's amended motion for modification. The chancellor recognized that [i]n its Order, the Court did not make any reference to the recent appointment of Mari Lynn Hays as Rick's conservator [,] and stated that [b]ecause the proof that would be offered in support of the Amended Motion is identical to the proof already received by the Court ..., rather than try the issue a second time, for the sake of judicial economy, the Court hereby adopts the evidence at the first trial for the Amended Motion.” The chancery court denied Mari Lynn's request that Lon be required to support Rick by depositing money into a conservatorship, holding that the court was without legal authority to grant the request.

ISSUES

¶ 8. Mari Lynn raises the following arguments on appeal:

(1) The chancery court erred by failing to modify Lon's alimony obligation upward.

(2) The chancery court erred by failing to modify Lon's child-support obligation upward.

(3) The chancery court erred by failing to order Lon to pay monies into a conservatorship for Rick.

LAW AND ANALYSIS

¶ 9. We will reverse a decision of the chancery court in a domestic-relations case where the chancery court applied an erroneous legal standard or reached a manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous decision. Williams v. Williams, 37 So.3d 1171, 1173–74 (Miss.2010).

¶ 10. We find that the chancery court properly denied Mari Lynn's request that Lon be required to provide support in futuro for Rick after Rick attained majority. The chancellor found as follows, in relevant part:

a modification proceeding is an inappropriate proceeding in which to decide whether a parent has a legal duty to contribute to the support of an adult disabled child. Taylor v. Taylor, 478 So.2d 310, 312 (Miss.1985). Therefore, this Court finds that Plaintiff's Motion for Modification is procedurally improperwith regard to the modification of child support for Rick. Further, this Court would note that it is without statutory authority or jurisdiction to entertain the consideration of continued support for an adult disabled child. It is the Court's sincere hope that the Mississippi Supreme Court will address this specific issue and give direction to the chancery courts of this state. It is also the Court's sincere hope that the Mississippi Legislature will address this matter. Until such time, however, this Court is simply without authority ... to grant post-majority support for a disabled adult child.

(Emphasis added.)

¶ 11. We agree with the chancellor that neither a motion for modification nor a motion for contempt was a permissible procedure to consider support for an adult child after the child had attained majority. We specifically have held that a child-support-modification proceeding brought by one parent against the other is not a proper proceeding in which to consider post-majority support. In Taylor, we held that [c]ourts in other jurisdictions have held the custodial parent has no standing to bring an action or seek support for a child after the child attains majority[,] and found that [w]e think the same rule applies in this state.” Taylor, 478 So.2d at 313 (citations omitted). After specifically holding that no such right existed, the Taylor Court continued, without citing authority:

In our opinion if there is a legal duty for a parent to support an adult incapacitated child, the duty runs from the parent to the child; not from one divorced spouse to the other. The action should therefore be maintained by or on behalf of the adult child against the parent from whom support is sought.

Id. The chancellor properly found that Mari Lynn's motion for modification was “procedurally improper with regard to the modification of child support for Rick.”

¶ 12. Although Taylor—in dicta, as it was not an issue to be decided—suggested a procedure for an adult child to seek post-majority support, Taylor clearly did not establish a substantive right (for, indeed, that is a legislative function) to post-majority support, or cite the existence of such authority under either the common law or our statutes. Taylor, 478 So.2d at 313. Nor did Taylor overrule Wright, et al. v. Coleman, 137 Miss. 699, 102 So. 774, 776–77 (1925), which provided that:

Under the common law there is no legal obligation resting upon the adult child to support his needy parent, or upon the parent to support his adult child, but such services between persons occupying such relationships are presumed to be...

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  • Ravenstein v. Ravenstein
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • July 17, 2014
    ...See Miss.Code Ann. § 93–11–65(8) (Rev.2013).¶ 38. Lastly, I call attention to my concurrence with this Court's prior opinion in Hays v. Alexander and note that the specially concurring opinion does not conflict with this Court's prior caselaw. Hays v. Alexander, 114 So.3d 704, 708 (¶ 14) (M......
  • Venstein v. Ravenstein
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • July 17, 2014
    ...See Miss. Code Ann. § 93-11-65(8) (Rev. 2013).¶38. Lastly, I call attention to my concurrence with this Court's prior opinion in Hays v. Alexander and note that the specially concurring opinion does not conflict with this Court's prior caselaw. Hays v. Alexander, 114 So. 3d 704, 708 (¶14) (......
  • Taylor v. Taylor
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • October 6, 2016
    ...the chancery court applied an erroneous legal standard or reached a manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous decision.” Hays v. Alexander , 114 So.3d 704, 707 (Miss.2013). Tommy testified that he was not asking that Andrea pay anything at that time, just that Andrea be held responsible for pay......
  • Archie v. Archie
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    • Mississippi Court of Appeals
    • October 15, 2013
    ... ... A parent has no statutory or common-law duty to support a child who has reached the age of majority. See Hays v. Alexander, 114 So.3d 704, 707 (¶ 12) (Miss.2013). “Legally, a parent is relieved of the duty to support his child once the child is emancipated ... ...
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