Josefine Bahn v. Mark Small
Josefine Bahn v. Mark Small
Opinion
[¶1] Mark Small appeals from a judgment of the District Court (Houlton, Daigle, J. ) modifying the terms of his 2016 divorce from Josefine Bahn as to parental rights and responsibilities for the parties' two children. Small contends that the court erroneously determined that the parties agreed to the terms of the modified divorce judgment. We agree and vacate the judgment.
[¶2] Josefine Bahn and Mark Small were divorced by an agreed-to judgment entered by the court ( O'Mara, J. ) in 2016. 1 Both parties later moved to modify the judgment as to parental rights and responsibilities. On July 23, 2018-the date set for a hearing on the motions to modify-the parties and the guardian ad litem (GAL) instead engaged in a judicial settlement conference ( Daigle, J. ), after which the court stated on the record that an agreement was reached on all points. Without creating any record that would show the terms of any such agreement and the parties' confirmation of it, the court entered a judgment dated August 30, 2018, purporting to memorialize that agreement. 2
[¶3] Small moved for relief from the judgment on the ground that it did not accurately reflect the parties' agreement. See M.R. Civ. P. 60(b). Based on its review of the "notes of the agreement read into the record on July 23, 2018," the court found that "[f]ull agreement was reached by the parties and the Guardian ad Litem" during the settlement conference, the GAL agreed to incorporate the agreement terms into a proposed order, the parties then had an "opportunity to express any disagreement with any of the terms of the proposed Order," Small "filed with the [c]ourt several points of disagreement" with the proposed order, and the court considered the points of disagreement before issuing the modified judgment. The court denied the motion for relief from judgment, concluding, "[T]he terms of the proposed Order are accurate in all respects, and accurately set[ ] forth all of the several terms agreed by the parties and the Guardian at the judicial settlement conference." Small appeals, arguing that the court erred by modifying the divorce judgment with terms to which he did not agree.
[¶4] When a judicial settlement conference results in an agreement, a "[c]omplete record" of the agreement must be created: "The parties may memorialize their mutual assent by signing a written agreement or by placing their oral stipulation on the record in open court."
Dewhurst v. Dewhurst
,
[¶5] In
Muther v. Broad Cove Shore Association
, for example, we affirmed a decision based on the parties' oral commitment of the complete agreement to the record: "[T]he transcript of the settlement agreement, without more, conclusively establishes the existence of a binding settlement agreement as a matter of law, and subsequent disputes that arose while attempting to reduce the settlement to a stipulated judgment did not affect the authority of the court to enforce the agreement through the entry of a judgment incorporating the terms previously stipulated to by the parties."
[¶6] In contrast, in
Dewhurst
, the terms of the parties' agreement in a divorce matter were captured only by the GAL's handwritten edits to a proposed judgment that previously had been prepared by one party's attorney.
[¶7] Here, as in
Dewhurst
,
Full agreement has been reached, which will result in a modified order. We are going to -- not indicate, because we don't have time -- we're not going to indicate into the record right now what has been agreed to. I have notes indicating what all of those agreed-to terms are. [The GAL] has been good enough to take notes and we've reviewed as we completed negotiation of each separate provision to make sure that we're all on the same page.
The written record contains what appear to be various pages of handwritten notes, but it is not clear who authored those pages or which of those notes were intended to reflect the terms of the parties' actual agreement, and none of those pages is signed by the parties.
[¶8] In the absence of such a factual record from which to determine whether the modified divorce judgment accurately reflects the parties' agreement, the court's findings that the parties reached a full agreement-and its iteration of the substance of the agreement-are clearly erroneous.
See
The entry is:
Judgment vacated. Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The judgment provided for, inter alia, shared parental rights and responsibilities, shared primary residence of the children, and roughly equal rights of contact.
The modified divorce judgment provided for allocated parental rights and responsibilities in which Bahn was allocated all decision making regarding the children's welfare, including education, religion, medical care, travel, child care, and residence. The court also modified Small's contact schedule with the children, set out a revised holiday contact schedule, established various safety and wellness requirements in the care of the children, and imposed a family therapy requirement.
In family matters, the agreement must also be "fairly made and consistent with public policy" in accordance with the best interests of the children.
Dewhurst v. Dewhurst
,
Although the issue of child support has not been raised by either party, we observe that neither the original nor the modified divorce judgment comports with statutory child support requirements. The initial divorce judgment, which was entered by agreement, deviated from the presumptive child support guidelines by stating only, "No child support is ordered as each party shall provide for the children when the children are in their care." See 19-A M.R.S. § 2005 (2018). The modified divorce judgment contains no terms regarding child support and does not purport to alter that portion of the original divorce judgment.
The court's deviation from the presumptive child support amount established according to the child support guidelines-in the absence of any findings regarding child support or a party's proposed written findings that the presumptive amount is "inequitable or unjust"-violates multiple requirements of the child support statute. 19-A M.R.S. §§ 2007 -2008 (2018) ;
see
19-A M.R.S. §§ 2005 -2006 (2018) ;
see also
Sullivan v. George
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Josefine BAHN v. Mark SMALL
- Status
- Published