Bobblis v. Costa
Bobblis v. Costa
Opinion of the Court
*846This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing a complaint for retroactive modification of a child support order. The complaint was filed by Andrew J. Costa (father) to terminate his child support obligation to his former wife, Lisa Bobblis (mother), for one of their two children. As we discuss in more detail below, pursuant to a separation agreement that was incorporated into the judgment of divorce, the father was required to pay child support until the child became emancipated. The agreement provided that emancipation would occur at the age of twenty-three if the child attended college or other accredited post high school training or education. The agreement further stated that emancipation would occur if the child entered the military. The child in question attended college as a full-time student and joined the United States Army Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) at the beginning of his junior year. The father claims that joining the ROTC is the equivalent of entering the military and, as a result, the child was emancipated at the time his participation in the ROTC program began. Consequently, the father argues, his child support obligation terminated at the beginning of the child's junior year of college. Following a trial at which both parties appeared pro se, a judge of the Probate and Family Court rejected the father's argument. In a well-reasoned memorandum of decision, the judge ruled that the child was not emancipated by virtue of his enrollment in the ROTC and dismissed the father's complaint. We affirm.
Background. We summarize the undisputed material facts as follows.
In August of 2012, the child enrolled at Springfield College. He received a scholarship award from the college and also obtained a number of educational loans.
A trial was held on September 23, 2016. Both parties presented their respective cases and offered uncontested documentary evidence.
In her memorandum of decision, the judge referred to the ROTC documents, indicating how each confirmed the distinction between the ROTC program, which provided some specialized training to a student cadet, and the military service that an ROTC cadet formally commits to undertake upon graduation. Based on the ROTC documents, Federal statutory law, and relevant case law (including reported decisions of other State courts), the judge concluded that the child did not become emancipated by virtue of his participation in the ROTC.
Discussion. We review a judge's decision denying or allowing modification of a child support order for abuse of discretion. See Lizardo v. Ortega,
1. ROTC program structure. Upon enrolling in the ROTC program, the child executed two documents, which were produced as evidence during the trial: the cadet contract and the enlistment document. The cadet contract established the terms and conditions of the child's participation in the ROTC program "and later service in the United States Army." The enlistment document, which incorporates the cadet contract by reference, established the child's rank as an ROTC cadet, and states that the cadet contract includes "additional details of [his] enlistment."
In exchange for a scholarship covering his tuition and educational expenses, as well as a monthly subsistence allowance, the child assumed an active duty obligation to be met after he completed the ROTC program and graduated from college. He also agreed to accept an appointment, if offered, as a commissioned officer in the Army, upon graduation and completion of *848all ROTC requirements. However, if he violated the terms of the cadet contract or the ROTC program, he could have been ordered to active duty as an enlisted soldier or required to reimburse the United States government for the scholarship funds he had received.
The cadet contract closely tracks chapter 103 of title 10 of the United States Code, which establishes and governs ROTC programs. See
The contractual provisions of the enlistment document and cadet contract, as well as the statutory authority governing the ROTC program, demonstrate a clear distinction between participation in an ROTC program and military service under the ROTC program's terms. As the trial judge noted, "[an] ROTC cadet is simply a scholarship student who receives some special training and has an obligation to perform military service or repay the funds received after participation in the program." Importantly, the cadet contract and
2. Statutory and decisional law. Statutory and decisional authority further highlight the difference between participation in the ROTC program and service in the military. For example, the United States Code specifically distinguishes between members of the armed forces on one hand, and ROTC cadets on the other, in providing death benefits to members of the military. See
*849While no other Massachusetts court has directly ruled on the issue before us (whether enrolling in an ROTC program is considered entry into the military for purposes of emancipation), courts in other jurisdictions have considered the related question of whether enrolling in a military academy is an emancipating event. Military service is often considered an emancipating event because it subjects an individual to "extensive government control, which is inconsistent with a parent's control and support of a child." Zuckerman v. Zuckerman,
Conclusion. We agree with the trial judge's thoughtful analysis respecting the distinction between a student cadet participating in a college ROTC program, and a cadet's later full-time military service. Like the trial judge, we believe that "[e]ntry ... into the military" as set forth in the parties' separation agreement, when used in the emancipation context, does not apply to participation in a ROTC program that does not include full-time service in an active or reserve component of the armed forces. See, e.g., Allison,
So ordered.
On appeal, the father erroneously argues that the judge "did not issue" factual findings. The judge's findings, although not expressly labeled as such, are set forth in her written decision, are firmly rooted in the evidence, and more than adequately support the judgment of dismissal. See generally Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 52(a).
The child and the mother remain co-obligors on college loans.
The father relied on a "United States Government Common Access Card," which allegedly referenced the child's rank and pay grade. The mother countered with a sworn statement of an Army ROTC officer, who indicated that this card was inaccurate, that it had been issued by mistake, and that the child was in the process of obtaining a corrected card. Other than the father and the mother, no witnesses were called to testify.
The father argues, in passing, that the judge erred by denying him an opportunity to prove that the child no longer resided with the mother. Putting aside whether the father preserved this claim of error, it is enough to say that the father did not, at any stage of the case, offer any competent evidence to show that the child in fact ever maintained a domicile apart from the mother during the relevant time frame.
We consider "(1) whether the factual findings are 'clearly erroneous,' giving 'due regard ... to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses,' Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 52(a) (2008); (2) whether there were errors of law; and (3) whether the judge appears to have based her decision not on sound discretion, but 'on whimsy, caprice, or arbitrary or idiosyncratic notions' " (citation omitted). Pierce v. Pierce,
Conversely, courts in New York and Missouri have held that, when considering emancipation, entering the United States Military Academy at West Point or the United States Air Force Academy is equivalent to entering the military. See Porath v. McVey,
Claiming the father's appeal is frivolous, the mother also maintains she is entitled to attorney's fees and double costs pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 25, as appearing in
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.