Murphy v. Murphy
Murphy v. Murphy
Opinion
This is a divorce case.
The trial court after an ore tenus hearing divorced the parties, awarded custody of the three minor children to the mother, and ordered the husband to pay child support in the amount of $450 per month for each child. In addition, the trial court required the husband to pay $250 per month to the wife for payment on the amount owed on her automobile. The husband now appeals and we affirm.
The dispositive issue on appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion in determining *Page 565 the amount of child support and in ordering the husband to pay the indebtedness on the wife's automobile. We find no error requiring reversal and affirm.
The evidence in the instant case is contained in a three volume record. Much of it concerns financial matters and, to use the words of the husband's able counsel, the evidence in this case is "convoluted, complicated and often beyond one's financial imagination." Be that as it may, a review of the record with the attendant presumptions reveals the following pertinent facts:
The parties were married in 1957. Five children were born of the marriage and at the time of trial three were minors, the youngest eleven and the oldest sixteen years old. The parties separated in 1980 and remained separated until the divorce in 1983 except for one brief attempt at reconciliation.
The parties are well educated; both husband and wife hold doctorate degrees. The wife is employed as the head of the English department at a state junior college in Alabama and has worked there several years. The husband was once employed as president of the same junior college but he resigned sometime before the divorce proceedings, apparently in order to devote more time to various business ventures.
Although both parties were primarily educators, they maintained a very high standard of living, attributable in part to inherited property and the vast generosity of the husband's parents.
The husband contends that the trial court abused its discretion in the amount of child support awarded and in ordering him to make the wife's car payments because the husband had suffered severe financial setbacks prior to the divorce proceedings. Prior to 1980, the husband bought two marinas in Baldwin County. Due to financial mismanagement and a hurricane, the husband lost large sums of money and property and incurred tremendous debts. At the time of the hearing, the husband was not regularly employed and owned almost negligible assets. It is the husband's contention that because of his reduced financial condition he is unable to make the child support payments in the amount ordered by the trial court, hence the trial court abused its discretion. We disagree.
An award of child support is within the sound discretion of the trial court and will not be reversed on appeal unless there is plain and palpable abuse of that discretion. Butts v. Butts,
The husband has had the benefit of his parents' generosity throughout his financial difficulties. The husband's father testified that his son owed him approximately $600,000. The husband has transferred a considerable amount of land to his parents and large sums of money were realized from the sale of timber. The husband's parents have assumed various mortgages and debts on behalf of their son. There is, in fact, every indication that the husband's parents have given their son "access" to large amounts of money on a regular basis in the past and it appears to be a continuing arrangement.
The husband was unemployed at the time of the trial, although he had applied for a job at one business. The husband testified that he did not want a job in education. The husband and his father entered into a partnership in August 1982, with the husband contributing approximately $23,000 to the business, a pig farm.
The husband also testified that he had earned some $45,000 in rent from July 1982 to the time of the trial, February 1983. In the last couple of years the husband has purchased several expensive gifts and personal goods such as a color television, video cassette recorder, video disc player, diamond rings, and a watch. *Page 566
Taking the husband's ability to earn in consideration, coupled with his parents' continuing financial assistance, this court cannot say that the trial court so abused its discretion as to require reversal. We note that the matter of child support is never res judicata and can be modified if a change in circumstances justifies it. Boswell v. Boswell,
The husband also contends that the "primary care doctrine" is unconstitutional. This argument was not properly raised at the trial level and, therefore, is not before this court. In any event, there is no indication that the trial court relied on this doctrine in determining support. See Hamilton v. Hamilton,
Additionally, in view of the husband's ability to earn, the trial court did not err in determining child support and in ordering the husband to pay the wife's automobile payments.
This case is due to be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
WRIGHT, P.J., and BRADLEY, J., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Cecil Lee Murphy v. Margaret Ann Murphy.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published