In re Marriage of Reedy ( 2019 )


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    2019 IL App (1st) 182443-U
    No. 1-18-2443
    Order filed December 9, 2019
    First Division
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as
    precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    In re MARRIAGE OF REEDY                                       )
    )   Appeal from the
    (Maureen M. Reedy,                                            )   Circuit Court of
    )   Cook County.
    Petitioner-Appellee,                                )
    )   No. 06 D 5560
    v.                                                       )
    )   Honorable
    Scott E. Reedy,                                               )   Raul Vega,
    )   Judge, presiding.
    Respondent-Appellant.)                              )
    JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Pierce and Walker concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1        Held: We affirm the trial court’s judgment retroactively granting Maureen additional
    child support for the years 2009 to 2015. A retroactive support award is
    appropriate because the parties’ marital settlement agreement set child support as
    a percentage of Scott’s net income and required Scott to provide Maureen with
    updated tax documents yearly. The trial court’s order is enforcement—not
    “modification”—of the parties’ original agreement.
    No. 1-18-2443
    ¶2                                         Background
    ¶3     Maureen and Scott were married on September 18, 1993. They had two sons, born in
    2001 and 2003. The trial court entered an order dissolving their marriage on October 29, 2008.
    The court’s judgment expressly incorporated the terms of the parties’ marital settlement
    agreement (MSA). As part of the MSA, the parties agreed that Scott would pay child support.
    Paragraph 4A of the MSA provides, in relevant part:
    “[¶ 4A] Upon entry of the Judgment and continuing each month thereafter,
    Scott shall pay child support for [the children] in the amount of Two Thousand
    One Hundred Forty-Eight Dollars ($2,148.00) per month payable on the first
    Thursday of each month. The parties agree and acknowledge that said child
    support is guideline support of twenty-eight percent (28%) based upon Scott’s
    annual net salary. Scott represents and warrants that his annual net income from
    Source One Staffing, Inc. is $92,062.”
    In the next paragraph of the MSA, Scott agreed to provide his tax returns to Maureen every year:
    “[¶ 4B] Each year in which Scott is obligated to pay child support
    pursuant to paragraph 4A of this Agreement, Scott shall provide copies to
    Maureen of his Federal and State Income Tax Return, with all schedules attached
    and K-1 statements and calculations as to his net income within thirty (30) days of
    filing same and no later than the due date intended for filing extensions.”
    Scott’s support obligations were to continue until their two children turned 18 or graduated high
    school, whichever came later, or until either child became otherwise emancipated, or until entry
    of a contrary order by a court of competent jurisdiction.
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    No. 1-18-2443
    ¶4     On March 25, 2014, Maureen filed a petition for rule to show cause for indirect civil
    contempt. She alleged that Scott had violated the MSA by not providing his tax returns for any
    year from 2008 to 2013, despite Maureen’s request. Maureen needed the returns “to verify
    Scott’s income so that the correct child support obligation can be determined.” The trial court
    entered an order giving Scott two weeks to comply with his obligations to give Maureen his tax
    returns for the years 2008 through 2013.
    ¶5     Maureen then filed a “Petition for Child Support and Other Relief,” alleging Scott had
    provided his tax returns and they showed he should have paid her an additional $406,603 based
    on the calculation of 28% of Scott’s net income for the years 2009 through 2013. Maureen
    requested an order for Scott to “pay retroactive guideline child support” from January 1, 2009 to
    the date of the filing of the petition. She claimed in her petition that she “s[ought] to modify the
    dollar amount of Scott’s child support” based on his increase in disclosed income. The prayer for
    relief in her petition included a modification of the dollar amount to reflect 28% of Scott’s
    income, statutory interest for all support post-dating January 1, 2009, and an order requiring
    Scott to pay all attorney’s fees.
    ¶6     Scott filed a response, which disputed Maureen’s calculation of the additional child
    support he owed and argued: “[Maureen] is barred, pursuant to 750 ILCS 5/510, from seeking a
    modification of child support for any time prior to November 10, 2014, which was the date
    [Maureen]’s Petition was filed.”
    ¶7     The parties filed memoranda in support of their respective positions and the trial court
    held hearings spanning several months. Scott and Maureen both testified. Because the facts are
    not in dispute we need not recite their testimony in great detail.
    -3-
    No. 1-18-2443
    ¶8     Briefly, Scott testified about his income and tax obligations for each year from 2009 to
    2015. Maureen testified about Scott’s failure to provide tax documents to her for any year after
    the entry of the judgment dissolving their marriage. Scott and Maureen’s accountant, Michael
    Rubin, also testified about Scott’s income and tax obligations for the relevant years.
    ¶9     The trial court entered an order granting Maureen retroactive child support. The trial
    court found Scott had failed to provide his income tax returns to Maureen as the MSA required.
    The trial court made detailed factual findings about Scott’s income based on his tax documents,
    his testimony, and Rubin’s testimony. As with the parties’ testimony, those factual findings are
    not relevant (Scott does not challenge them), but they led the trial court to conclude Scott owed a
    total of $323,949.52 in retroactive child support for the years 2009 through 2015.
    ¶ 10   The trial court’s order also allowed Maureen to file a fee petition within 35 days.
    Maureen filed her petition on August 31, 2018. Before the trial court ruled on the fee petition,
    Scott filed a motion to reconsider on September 7, 2018, asserting the trial court had erred “as a
    matter of law” when it ordered child support for a time period pre-dating the filing of Maureen’s
    petition. Scott argued Section 5/510(a) of the Marital Dissolution Act (750 ILCS 5/510(a) (West
    2018)) only allowed for modification of child support for installments accrued after the filing of
    a motion to modify.
    ¶ 11   On November 14, 2018, the trial court held a hearing on Scott’s motion to reconsider.
    Maureen’s counsel initially argued the trial court should strike the motion to reconsider as
    untimely because it was filed more than 30 days after the entry of the trial court’s order granting
    child support. On the merits, Maureen’s counsel emphasized her petition for child support “was
    not a motion for modification. This was a motion for on [sic] past child support.” The trial court
    -4-
    No. 1-18-2443
    struck Scott’s motion to reconsider as untimely, finding its July 30 order to have been final and
    appealable. The court also granted Maureen’s petition for fees. Scott filed a notice of appeal two
    days later.
    ¶ 12                                         Analysis
    ¶ 13    Scott contends the trial court erred by awarding Maureen retroactive child support. He
    says the Marital Dissolution Act allows courts to modify awards of child support, but to do so
    only prospectively. See 750 ILCS 5/510(a) (West 2018). Maureen agrees with Scott’s
    interpretation of Section 5/510(a)—modifying child support awards is a forward-looking
    enterprise—but, she responds she was not seeking modification of the trial court’s original order.
    Instead, Maureen maintains, she sought nothing more than an order enforcing the child support
    terms of the MSA. In reply, Scott asserts that Maureen’s argument about enforcement has been
    forfeited and, regardless of any possible forfeiture, Maureen’s petition for child support cannot
    be reasonably read as an attempt to enforce the MSA.
    ¶ 14                                       Jurisdiction
    ¶ 15    As a preliminary matter, Maureen contests our jurisdiction to hear Scott’s appeal. Her
    argument turns on the meaning of Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a), which requires the trial
    court to make an “express written finding” that a claim can be immediately appealed if the trial
    court’s order disposes “fewer than all of the *** claims” in an action. Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(a) (eff.
    Mar. 8, 2016). She claims Scott’s motion to reconsider was untimely, having been filed more
    than 30 days after the trial court’s order of retroactive child support. According to Maureen, no
    304(a) finding was necessary to allow Scott to appeal because “the pending petition for
    attorney’s fees was unrelated to [her] petition for back child support.” It follows, so says
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    No. 1-18-2443
    Maureen, that Scott’s notice of appeal was untimely since the late motion to reconsider did not
    toll the 30-day period Scott had to appeal.
    ¶ 16    Scott responds that Maureen’s petition for attorney’s fees was still pending at the time he
    filed his motion to reconsider, meaning the trial court had not yet disposed of all of Maureen’s
    claims. In Scott’s view, the trial court had to make a Rule 304(a) finding to make its order
    granting retroactive support immediately appealable. Maureen included attorney’s fees as part of
    the requested relief in her petition for child support and the trial court’s judgment granted
    Maureen leave to file the petition for fees. We agree with Scott that we have jurisdiction.
    ¶ 17    The parties’ jurisdictional argument takes us to the brink of an entrenched split in the
    appellate court districts about the interpretation of Illinois Supreme Court Rules 301 and 304(a)
    in postdissolution proceedings. See In re Marriage of Teymour and Mostafa, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 161091
    , ¶¶ 17-39 (comparing In re Marriage of Carr, 
    323 Ill. App. 3d 481
     (1st Dist. 2001) and
    In re Marriage of A’Hearn, 
    408 Ill. App. 3d 1091
     (3d Dist. 2011), with In re Marriage of
    Alyassir, 
    335 Ill. App. 3d 998
     (2d Dist. 2003), and In re Marriage of Gaudio, 
    368 Ill. App. 3d 153
     (4th Dist. 2006)). The court in Teymour rejected Carr and purported to bring the First
    District in line with the Second and Fourth. Teymour, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 161091
    , ¶ 41.
    ¶ 18    Another division of the First District agreed with Teymour, but ultimately held it lacked
    jurisdiction following the reasoning on either side of the split. In re Marriage of Sanchez and
    Sanchez-Ortega, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 171075
    , ¶ 27-8. We take a similar approach. We have
    jurisdiction looking to either line of cases.
    ¶ 19    On one hand, the Third District set out the general principle, “postidssolution petitions or
    motions that are separate actions are independently appealable upon their resolution, whereas
    -6-
    No. 1-18-2443
    filings that are part of a larger action are only appealable when the larger action is resolved,
    absent a Rule 304(a) finding.” A’Hearn, 408 Ill. App. 3d at 1094. The court, focusing on the
    content of the filings, found them to be independent. Id. at 1098. The court was careful to
    emphasize that “on its face” the wife’s petition for maintenance had “nothing to do with a
    modification of child custody.” Id. at 1093-94. The court concluded that separate filings could be
    related to the underlying proceeding “if they are filed during the pendency of a larger petition.”
    Id. On the facts present before the Third District, the husband’s petitions for rules to show cause
    were not related to the petition to modify custody; they were separate just like the wife’s petition
    for maintenance. Id. at 1098-99. The court’s resolution of the husband’s petition to modify
    custody was, therefore, final and immediately appealable without a Rule 304(a) finding. Id.
    ¶ 20   We are confronted with a different circumstance here. Focusing on Maureen’s petition
    for child support, it includes an express request for attorney’s fees “on its face.” Then, after the
    petition for support was granted, the trial court granted Maureen leave to file the petition for fees
    “during the pendency of [the] larger petition” for support. Maureen was in control of her
    pleadings and cannot now attempt to defeat our jurisdiction by counterfactually separating her
    request for fees from her request for child support.
    ¶ 21   On the other hand, the Fourth District has held, “[r]egardless how the issues are raised (in
    a single petition versus separate petitions), if an order finally resolves a separate claim but leaves
    other claims pending, the trial court must make a Rule 304(a) finding before the order is
    appealable.” Gaudio, 
    368 Ill. App. 3d at 159
     (aligning itself with Alyassir). We have described
    the Second and Fourth District’s opinions as creating a regime in which every postdissolution
    filing is part of only one action raising several claims. Teymour, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 161091
    , ¶ 38.
    -7-
    No. 1-18-2443
    Whether the claims are related or not, the trial court must either make a Rule 304(a) finding to
    render its judgment appealable, or the parties must await the disposition of all pending matters.
    See 
    id.
    ¶ 22      Under this conception of postdissolution practice, we undoubtedly have jurisdiction over
    Scott’s appeal. Even if we thought Maureen’s petition for fees was a separately filed claim and
    not part of the relief for her initial claim, under Alyassir, Gaudio, and Teymour, Scott had to wait
    for the disposition of the fee petition to appeal absent a Rule 304(a) finding. There was no 304(a)
    finding so Scott’s notice of appeal was timely filed two days after the trial court’s ruling on the
    fee petition.
    ¶ 23                                          Forfeiture
    ¶ 24      We briefly address forfeiture. Scott asks us to disregard the entirety of Maureen’s
    argument that the trial court simply enforced, rather than modified, the terms of the MSA by
    ordering retroactive support. Specifically, Scott claims Maureen cannot now frame her argument
    as one of enforcement of the MSA, relying on Section 5/505(d) of the Marital Dissolution Act,
    when she actually sought to modify the terms of the MSA in the trial court, relying on Section
    5/510(a) of the Act. We disagree with Scott.
    ¶ 25      Scott’s argument turns largely on his claim that “at no time in the trial court did Maureen
    seek any relief pursuant to 5/505(d).” That is not true. Her petition for support says in its first
    sentence that Maureen “requests that [the trial court], pursuant to 750 ILCS 5/505, 510 and 511
    *** set appropriate child support.” We find the lack of a citation to a precise subsection
    irrelevant, particularly because the substance of Maureen’s arguments both in the trial court and
    in this court focused on enforcing the order for child support already in effect, even if she also
    -8-
    No. 1-18-2443
    described her claim as modifying the terms of the MSA to seek additional child support. See
    O’Neal-Vidales v. Clark, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 141248
    , ¶ 18 (declining to find party forfeited
    reliance on particular case simply by failing to cite case in trial court where party otherwise
    “clearly raised the issue.”).
    ¶ 26    Of equal importance, Maureen is the appellee and “may raise an issue on review that was
    not presented to the trial court to sustain the judgment, as long as the issue’s factual basis was
    laid before the trial court.” U.S. Bank, Nat’l Ass’n as Trustee for Credit Suisse First Boston
    CSFB 2005-11 v. Laskowski, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 181627
    , ¶ 17.
    ¶ 27    Scott insists that Maureen’s request for retroactive child support was exclusively based
    on a request to modify the original agreement for child support in the MSA and relied at all times
    on Section 5/510(a) of the Act. We cannot find support for this in the record. Maureen’s petition
    asserts Scott failed to follow the MSA and asks the court to award child support that Scott “ought
    to have paid” all along. Maureen phrased her memorandum of law in support of her petition
    almost entirely in terms of enforcing Scott’s preexisting obligations to provide her with the tax
    returns. Maureen wanted the trial court to “honor the parties’ agreement for child support,” to
    “enforce[ ] retroactively” Scott’s obligation to pay 28% of his net income, and to order
    retroactive support to “enforce court orders.” During litigation on Scott’s motion to reconsider
    the trial court’s order of retroactive support, Maureen’s counsel could not have been more
    emphatic: “[T]his was not a motion for modification. This was a motion for on [sic] past child
    support. We didn’t file for modification whatsoever.”
    ¶ 28    Scott correctly points out that Maureen occasionally used the word “modify” in her
    filings. We agree that Maureen’s arguments could have been more precise. But Scott’s approach
    -9-
    No. 1-18-2443
    to forfeiture is too rigidly formalistic. A holistic reading of Maureen’s filings and arguments
    show she sought retroactive child support based on Scott’s alleged failure to comply with the
    written terms of the MSA. She has not forfeited her argument that the trial court properly
    awarded retroactive child support in conformity with the MSA simply because she uses the word
    “enforcement” more often in her appellate brief than she did in her trial court filings.
    ¶ 29                                 The Petition for Support
    ¶ 30   Scott argues the trial court erred, as a matter of law and public policy, when it granted
    Maureen’s petition for child support. According to Scott, the trial court’s action constituted an
    improper retroactive modification of the child support provisions in the MSA. Maureen, as we
    have discussed, counters that the trial court did no more than enforce the MSA. Before
    proceeding, we find it important that Scott does not challenge the trial court’s factual finding he
    violated the terms of the MSA requiring him to provide Maureen with his tax returns.
    ¶ 31   Section 5/510(a) of the Marital Dissolution Act, on which Scott relies, only allows
    prospective modification of child support: “the provisions of any judgment respect maintenance
    or support may be modified only as to installments accruing subsequent to due notice by the
    moving party of the filing of the motion for modification.” 750 ILCS 5/510(a) (West 2018).
    Maureen correctly concedes that modification can only be done on a forward-looking basis. See
    In re Marriage of Peterson, 
    2011 IL 110984
    , ¶ 18 (“a retroactive modification is limited to only
    those installments that date back to the filing date of the petition for modification.”). Given the
    parties’ agreement on this point, we are not really being asked to decide (as Scott puts it) whether
    the trial court can retroactively modify a child support order. Statutory and Illinois Supreme
    - 10 -
    No. 1-18-2443
    Court authority makes plain the court cannot do so. Our task, instead, involves interpreting Scott
    and Maureen’s MSA to determine whether the trial court’s order constitutes a “modification.”
    ¶ 32    We interpret the parties’ MSA under contract principles, giving effect to the intent of the
    parties as expressed in the MSA’s plain language. In re Marriage of Coulter and Trinidad, 
    2012 IL 113474
    , ¶ 19. See relevant provisions of the MSA at ¶ 3.
    ¶ 33    Adjustments of a parent’s child support obligations to conform to the percentage of net
    income set out in the MSA do not require court approval. In re Marriage of Baumgartner, 
    384 Ill. App. 3d 39
    , 47 (2008). That’s because it is “not a modification of [the husband]’s support
    obligation.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). In Baumgartner, the parties’ MSA “contemplated that after
    [the husband] provided the required financial information, the parties would come to an
    agreement regarding the additional amount of child support that was due.” 
    Id.
     We reasoned that
    the parties could update child support obligations out of court as they were doing no more than
    “acting under the direction of the circuit court’s order” initially setting child support. 
    Id.
    ¶ 34    The MSA in Baumgartner contained similar language to MSA here, providing,
    “[husband] shall pay $762 per month to [wife] as child support which is 20% of his estimated net
    income.” 
    Id. at 41
    . The MSA, again like the one at issue, also required the husband “on an
    annual basis, within 30 days” of receiving tax documents, to provide those documents to his
    former wife. 
    Id.
     We acknowledge the MSA in Baumgartner provided more specifics on the
    procedures. For example, the MSA expressly required the husband to “recompute his net
    income” and if the amount of support was less than that income he was to “pay [the wife] the
    difference between the amount paid and the computed 20% figure.” 
    Id. at 41
    . Maureen and
    Scott’s MSA does not contain similar language, but that distinction is not dispositive.
    - 11 -
    No. 1-18-2443
    ¶ 35   Part of our task, when interpreting contracts like the MSA, requires not rendering a
    provision of the contract meaningless. Wolfensberger v. Eastwood, 
    382 Ill. App. 3d 924
    , 934
    (2008). The combined provisions in the MSA—setting out a percentage of Scott’s income as the
    basis for support in paragraph 4A plus Scott’s requirement to annually update Maureen with his
    tax documents in paragraph 4B—become empty words if Scott and Maureen were not meant to
    work out Scott’s updated child support obligation yearly.
    ¶ 36   Because Scott does not challenge the trial court’s finding that he violated the terms of the
    MSA, we see no basis to find the trial court abused its discretion in ordering him to pay child
    support on the terms to which he agreed.
    ¶ 37   Affirmed.
    - 12 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-18-2443

Filed Date: 12/9/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/17/2024