Hardy v. Hardy
Hardy v. Hardy
Opinion
This case involves a court-ordered child support obligation pursuant to a divorce.
The parties originally divorced in 1978 in Connecticut. Inter alia, the wife was awarded custody of the two children of the marriage and the husband was ordered to pay child support. They remarried each other in Alabama in 1985, then divorced again in 1986, after both children were past their minority. In 1987, the wife filed a petition for the ascertainment of child support. Ultimately, the trial court entered a judgment against the husband for $16,431.35, i.e., the amount of child support that the husband was in arrears before the 1985 remarriage. The husband's post-trial motion was denied. Hence, this appeal.
The dispositive issue is whether the trial court erred in ordering a judgment for child support arrearage against the husband. Neither party contends that the court-ordered child support obligation was due after their subsequent remarriage. We are only concerned with the period of time from the original divorce decree in 1978 to the date of the remarriage in 1985.
The husband does not dispute that he did not pay all of the support ordered in the first divorce decree that he was obligated to pay during the children's minority. It is his position that the second marriage to the wife served to, in effect, "wipe the slate clean" as it pertained to the child support arrearage. He further contends that even if the subsequent marriage did not extinguish the child support arrearage, the parties litigated the child support arrearage issue in the second divorce proceeding and that res judicata bars the wife from relitigating that issue here.
The wife asserts that child support obligations become final judgments as of the due date and are subject to being collected as are any other judgments. She contends that res judicata has no application in an action where she is merely seeking to enforce the payment of a judgment for child support arrearage. She cites Mann v. Mann,
We are mindful of the well-established rule that when evidence is presented ore tenus, as in the instant case, the trial court's judgment is presumptively correct and is subject to being set aside only for *Page 1015
plain and palpable abuse of discretion. Beckwith v. Beckwith,
Child support obligations have been the subject of a vast number of cases; therefore, the law in Alabama regarding past-due installments of child support is well established. The amount of the child support set by a divorce judgment cannot be waived or altered by the parties. Mann, supra; Morgan v.Morgan,
In the instant case, the Connecticut divorce decree was before the trial court, providing sufficient proof of the support provisions of the judgment. See Taylor v. Taylor,
The husband does not dispute that he accrued an arrearage of child support prior to the 1985 remarriage and that he has not paid the arrearage. He contends that his remarriage to the wife served to "forgive" any arrearage because, he claims, the support order dissolved or terminated upon the subsequent remarriage of the parties. Certainly, one may defend a collection action by pleading that payment or discharge was by some means other than that expressly directed in the divorce decree. Binns v. Maddox,
The husband next argues that the trial court erred in considering the wife's action for the child support arrearage because, he claims, the action was barred by the doctrine *Page 1016 of res judicata. He contends that the child support arrearage was an issue in the second divorce action. Interestingly, he does not provide a copy of the second divorce decree or any of the record in that second divorce case to support, or prove, his res judicata argument.
For res judicata to bar this action, certain elements must be present. They are: (1) there must be substantial identity between the parties in the prior and subsequent suits, (2) there must be the same cause of action in both suits, (3) the previous case must have been decided by a court of competent jurisdiction, and (4) the previous adjudication must have reached the merits of the case. Ex parte McCracken,
On the record before us, which supports the trial court's findings, we cannot reverse the trial court's judgment. In light of the above principles of law regarding accrued child support obligations, the trial court correctly entered a judgment for the wife. As a result, the judgment is due to be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
ROBERTSON, P.J., and RUSSELL, J., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Gordon E. Hardy v. Christina A. Hardy.
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published