John T. McAdams v. Julie F. McAdams , 261 So. 3d 157 ( 2018 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2017-CA-01542-COA
    JOHN T. MCADAMS                                                        APPELLANT/
    CROSS-APPELLEE
    v.
    JULIE F. MCADAMS                                                        APPELLEE/
    CROSS-APPELLANT
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                         09/26/2017
    TRIAL JUDGE:                              HON. J. LARRY BUFFINGTON
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                HARRISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT,
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                   PAUL SNOW
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                    S. CHRISTOPHER FARRIS
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                       CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
    DISPOSITION:                              ON DIRECT APPEAL: AFFIRMED. ON
    CROSS-APPEAL: AFFIRMED - 12/04/2018
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE LEE, C.J., FAIR AND WILSON, JJ.
    FAIR, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    In this appeal, John McAdams claims the Harrison County Chancery Court erred when
    it did not terminate his periodic alimony obligation based on Julie McAdams’s relationship
    with A.J. Raymond. Alternatively, John argues that his alimony obligation should be reduced
    because Julie’s financial position has improved and his has not. Finally, John claims the
    chancellor should not have awarded Julie $1,000 in attorney’s fees. Julie cross-appeals and
    claims the chancellor should have awarded her more attorney’s fees. Finding no error, we
    affirm the chancery court’s judgment.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2.    John and Julie were married for approximately thirty years. They divorced in June
    2005 due to irreconcilable differences. This appeal centers on John’s resulting obligation to
    pay Julie $2,000 per month in periodic alimony.
    ¶3.    In February 2017, John petitioned to terminate his alimony obligation and alleged that
    Julie was cohabiting and in a de facto marriage with Raymond. Failing that, John claimed
    that his alimony obligation should be reduced due to Julie’s improved financial position.
    John also wanted Julie to reimburse him for $192,000 in alimony that he paid after she began
    working.
    ¶4.    Julie contested John’s petition and filed a counterclaim for increased alimony. She
    also argued that John was in contempt because he stopped paying alimony when he filed his
    petition. Finally, Julie asked for any attorney’s fees that she would incur while contesting
    John’s petition and proving her contempt allegation.
    ¶5.    At trial, the chancellor heard testimony from Julie, John, and Raymond. Through a
    stipulation, John presented evidence gathered by two private investigators who periodically
    drove by Julie’s condo in Gulfport, Mississippi, and Raymond’s house in Maurepas,
    Louisiana, between January 17 and March 6, 2017. The evidence presented at trial will be
    discussed in greater detail below.
    ¶6.    The chancellor denied John’s petition to terminate alimony without commenting on
    his cohabitation and de facto marriage claims. The chancellor also denied Julie’s request for
    increased alimony. Although the chancellor initially reduced John’s monthly alimony
    2
    obligation by $150 because Julie had begun receiving social security benefits derived from
    her own earnings, the chancellor subsequently changed his mind incident to Julie’s post-trial
    motion. After finding that John had “wrongfully” deposited two alimony payments in the
    chancery court’s registry instead of paying them to Julie, the chancellor awarded Julie $1,000
    of the $7,500 in attorney’s fees that she requested. John appeals, and Julie cross-appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Termination of Alimony
    ¶7.    John claims the chancellor should have terminated his alimony obligation because
    Julie and Raymond were cohabiting or involved in a de facto marriage. As mentioned above,
    the chancellor denied John’s petition without otherwise commenting on his cohabitation and
    de facto marriage allegations. Even so, “[w]ith respect to issues of fact where the chancellor
    made no specific finding,” we assume that he “resolved all such fact issues in favor of the
    appellee, or at least in a manner that is consistent with the decree.” Smith v. Smith, 
    545 So. 2d 725
    , 727 (Miss. 1989).
    ¶8.    John bore the burden of proving that “there has been a material or substantial change
    in circumstances since the divorce.” Hughes v. Hughes, 
    186 So. 3d 394
    , 397 (¶6) (Miss. Ct.
    App. 2016). Alimony may be modified when there is “mutual support between the recipient
    . . . and another individual which alters the recipient[’s] . . . financial needs.” Scharwath v.
    Scharwath, 
    702 So. 2d 1210
    , 1211 (¶6) (Miss. 1997). “The alimony recipient’s cohabitation
    with or de facto marriage to another may be a change in circumstances justifying the
    termination of alimony.” Hughes, 186 So. 3d at 397 (¶6) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    3
    “The chancellor’s findings of fact about cohabitation, de facto marriage, and mutual support
    are entitled to substantial deference when reviewed on appeal.” Id.
    A.      Cohabitation
    ¶9.    John claims that the chancellor should have found that Julie and Raymond had been
    cohabiting. “[C]ohabitation creates a presumption that a material change in circumstances
    has occurred. . . . This presumption will shift the burden to the recipient . . . to come forward
    with evidence suggesting that there is no mutual support . . . .” Scharwath, 702 So. 2d at
    1211 (¶7) (citation omitted). According to John, he should not have to pay Julie alimony
    because she failed to rebut the mutual-support presumption.
    ¶10.   Julie and Raymond met and began dating after Julie and John’s 2005 divorce.1
    According to Julie, she and Raymond broke up after dating for three or four years. They
    resumed their relationship in late 2015. From then until the time of trial, their relationship
    had been intimate and exclusive, but they always had separate residences. Julie had been
    living in her Gulfport condo since 2005.2 Raymond’s home was in Maurepas, Louisiana.
    Julie and Raymond both testified that they do not spend every night together.
    ¶11.   Through a stipulation, John presented evidence gathered by two private investigators
    who periodically drove by Julie’s condo or Raymond’s home on a near-daily basis between
    January 17 and March 6, 2015. The private investigators generally checked between 1:00
    1
    In his opening brief, John mischaracterizes Julie and Raymond’s relationship as
    though it has been continuous since 2005, but Julie and Raymond both testified otherwise.
    2
    Julie’s mother originally bought the condo in 2005, and Julie subsequently bought
    it from her mother.
    4
    p.m. and 5:00 p.m., and they usually found Julie’s and Raymond’s vehicles in the same place.
    Julie testified that it takes approximately an hour and a half to drive between her home and
    Raymond’s, but they do not typically drive back and forth in a single day. So, combined with
    Julie’s testimony, the private investigators’ reports suggested that Julie and Raymond had
    spent the night together approximately thirty-six of the forty-nine days that they checked.
    Thus, the chancellor could have reasonably concluded that Julie and Raymond spent the night
    together during the times that their vehicles were in the same place. But that is not outcome
    determinative in this case. Hughes, 186 So. 3d at 400 (¶16) (“The question is not whether
    it would have been ‘reasonable’ for the chancellor to have reached some other conclusion.
    Rather, the relevant question is whether the chancellor’s findings are ‘manifestly wrong’ or
    ‘clearly erroneous.’”).
    ¶12.   As discussed in Hughes:
    The investigator’s testimony that he watched Mariel’s and/or Darrell’s homes
    on approximately twelve days over the course of two months in the fall of
    2010 and believed that they spent the night together seven times is hardly
    conclusive proof of “cohabitation.” Indeed, even accepting Tim’s view of this
    evidence, it is not materially distinguishable from the evidence deemed
    insufficient to establish cohabitation in Coggins [v. Coggins, 
    132 So. 3d 636
    (Miss. Ct. App. 2014)] and McMinn [v. McMinn, 
    171 So. 3d 511
     (Miss. Ct.
    App. 2014)]. In Coggins, the boyfriend stayed at the ex-wife’s house once or
    twice a week but did not keep personal effects there, did not contribute to the
    household financially, and maintained his own residence. Coggins, 
    132 So. 3d at 643
     (¶¶26-29). In McMinn, the ex-wife “regularly stayed overnight with her
    boyfriend on weekends and several days during the week, and went on
    vacations with him and his family”; however, the two maintained separate
    residences and finances. McMinn, 
    171 So. 3d at 518
     (¶26). This case is no
    different. Given that Darrell and Mariel consistently have maintained separate
    residences and finances, the facts that they went on trips together and spent the
    night at each other’s houses—even if on a somewhat regular basis—do not
    establish “cohabitation” as a matter of law. Applying our deferential standard
    5
    of review, the chancellor’s findings on this issue are not manifestly wrong or
    clearly erroneous. Accordingly, the chancellor properly declined to apply the
    presumption of mutual support.
    Hughes, 186 So. 3d at 400 (¶17) (brackets omitted).
    ¶13.   Whether evidence rises to the level of proof of cohabitation is extremely fact driven,
    and our deferential standard of review often means that two chancellors could view the same
    evidence and reach different results that would both be upheld on appeal. Here, it was not
    unreasonable for the chancellor to find that the evidence fell short of establishing
    cohabitation. Notwithstanding the private investigators’ reports, Julie and Raymond both
    have their own homes, and they testified that they do not share finances. Because the
    chancellor’s findings on this issue were not manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous, it was
    unnecessary for Julie to rebut the mutual-support presumption. It follows that the chancellor
    did not err when he denied John’s petition to terminate his alimony obligation due to Julie’s
    alleged cohabitation with Raymond.
    B.     De Facto Marriage
    ¶14.   John claims that the chancellor should have terminated his alimony obligation because
    Julie and Raymond were in a de facto marriage. “A de facto marriage may be prove[d] in
    two ways.” Id. at (¶18). “First, a chancellor may find a de facto marriage if the alimony
    recipient is deliberately avoiding remarriage merely to continue receiving alimony.” Id.
    Here, there was no evidence to support such a conclusion. But a chancellor can also find that
    a couple is involved in a de facto marriage “if the alimony recipient and another person have
    so fashioned their relationship, to include their physical living arrangements and financial
    6
    affairs, that they could reasonably be considered as having entered into a de facto marriage.”
    Id. (internal quotation mark omitted).
    ¶15.   In Martin v. Martin, 
    751 So. 2d 1132
    , 1133 (¶3) (Miss. Ct. App. 1999), an ex-husband
    was required to pay periodic alimony. The ex-wife subsequently became involved in a long-
    term relationship. 
    Id.
     at (¶5). She wore a diamond engagement ring that her boyfriend gave
    her, and the couple consistently told their friends that they planned to marry “next year.” 
    Id.
    During cross-examination, the ex-wife admitted that she and her boyfriend had not married
    because she wanted to continue receiving alimony. 
    Id.
     The ex-wife and her boyfriend had
    separate places to live, but the boyfriend’s home was an “efficiency apartment,” while the
    ex-wife’s home was “luxurious.” Id. at 1133, 1136 (¶¶6, 15). The boyfriend had a key to the
    ex-wife’s home, spent the night there a few times each month, regularly ate meals there, and
    ran errands and did chores for her. Id. at 1133 (¶6). Plus, the ex-wife had given her
    boyfriend more than $11,000 over a three-year period. Id. The ex-wife also receive
    substantial discounts on clothes and cosmetics at the store where her boyfriend worked. Id.
    In that case, the chancellor terminated the ex-husband’s alimony obligation because the ex-
    wife and her boyfriend had entered into a “de facto marriage.” Id. at 1134-35 (¶¶10, 14).
    This Court upheld the chancellor’s decision that the ex-wife had “structured her relationship
    with [her boyfriend] in an attempt to circumvent the appearance of cohabitation so as to
    continue her alimony.” Id. at (¶16).
    ¶16.   In Hughes, 186 So. 3d at 398-99 (¶¶11, 13), the ex-wife and her boyfriend had been
    dating exclusively for four years, and the ex-wife wore a diamond ring that her boyfriend had
    7
    given her. Although they had separate houses, they spent the night together at least once a
    week. Id. at 398 (¶11). They traveled and vacationed together, and the boyfriend exhibited
    one of his Corvettes at the National Corvette Museum with a plaque stating that the car was
    on loan from him and the ex-wife. Id. at 399 (¶13). They denied that they had discussed
    marriage, but there was testimony that the ex-wife once said that it would “‘mess things up’
    in some unspecified way” if she married her boyfriend. Id. at 401 (¶22).
    ¶17.   This Court affirmed the chancellor’s judgment that the ex-husband had failed to prove
    the existence of a de facto marriage. Id. at 403 (¶26). There was no clear evidence that the
    ex-wife was avoiding remarriage solely to continue her alimony payments. Id. at 401 (¶22).
    And the evidence was conflicting at best as to whether she and her boyfriend had “so
    fashioned their relationship, to include their physical living arrangements and financial
    affairs, that they could reasonably be considered as having entered into a de facto marriage.”
    Id. at 403 (¶26). They had separate homes, and they did not have access to each other’s
    financial accounts. Id. at 402-03 (¶26). Most importantly, the chancellor’s findings simply
    were not “manifestly or clearly erroneous.” Id. at 403 (¶26).
    ¶18.   Julie and Raymond both testified that they were not planning to marry. They also
    testified that they do not share finances or own any assets together. There was no evidence
    that Raymond gives Julie money or access to his financial accounts. There was testimony
    that Raymond and Julie take vacations together and they share a bed when they do. Raymond
    testified that they split the costs of their trips. They also attend various events and shop for
    groceries together. At one time, they each had keys to one another’s homes, but as of the
    8
    trial, Julie was not sure whether she still had a key to Raymond’s condo. Julie testified that
    she and Raymond do not keep clothes at one another’s homes, so they pack a bag when they
    visit. Julie said that she sometimes washes her clothes at Raymond’s house, and she
    occasionally does Raymond’s laundry along with her own. Similarly, Raymond testified that
    “[e]very time something would break [at Julie’s condo, he’d] fix it for her, so she didn’t have
    to pay [any]body.” Finally, there was evidence that Raymond had given Julie cards, candy,
    flowers, and what Julie described as “costume” jewelry.
    ¶19.   “We will not reverse a chancellor’s findings regarding the existence or nonexistence
    of a de facto marriage unless they are manifestly or clearly erroneous.” Id. The facts of this
    case are closer to those in Hughes than they are to Martin. It was not manifestly or clearly
    erroneous for the chancellor to decide that Julie and Raymond were not involved in a de facto
    marriage. Thus, we find no merit to this issue.
    II.    Reduction of Alimony
    ¶20.   Next, John claims the chancellor should have reduced the amount of alimony that he
    has to pay Julie.    John’s reasoning is based on his assertions that Julie’s financial
    circumstances have improved and his financial circumstances have diminished. The party
    seeking to modify alimony bears the burden of proving a material, substantial, and
    unanticipated change of circumstances. See McCraw v. McCraw, 
    759 So. 2d 519
    , 521 (¶7)
    (Miss. Ct. App. 2000).
    ¶21.   John notes that Julie’s net worth has increased since their divorce, and her expenses
    have decreased. He further notes that Julie has begun receiving social security benefits.
    9
    Conversely, he says that his own net worth has decreased since the divorce and his liabilities
    have increased. John’s financial position was somewhat selective, though, as it relied on the
    premise that he would have to continue paying housing expenses for a house that he was
    selling. That is, John had remarried as of the time of trial, and he had moved into his new
    wife’s home. He had entered a contract with a prospective purchaser for the sale of his
    home, so he would soon no longer have to pay approximately $2,000 per month for the
    mortgages on that home. His utility and other related expenses would also decrease. John
    also testified that his income had doubled since the divorce. And a significant portion of
    John’s listed expenses related to his and Julie’s adult daughter and her children.
    ¶22.   It was within the chancellor’s discretion to implicitly find that Julie’s improved
    financial position nearly twelve years after her and John’s divorce was not unanticipated. It
    was also within the chancellor’s discretion to implicitly find that John’s financial position
    was not as dire as his financial statement suggested. As for Julie’s receipt of social security
    benefits, the Mississippi Supreme Court has recently held that “benefits derived from the
    other spouse’s income do not constitute a special circumstance triggering an automatic
    reduction in alimony.” Harris v. Harris, 
    241 So. 3d 622
    , 628 (¶19) (Miss. 2018). Julie’s
    social security benefits derive from her own income. Her benefits do not justify an automatic
    reduction in John’s alimony obligation. This issue is meritless.
    III.   Attorney’s Fees
    ¶23.   John filed his petition to terminate alimony in February 2017. At the beginning of
    March and April 2017, he deposited Julie’s alimony check in the court’s registry. On April
    10
    26, 2017, Julie received the $4,000 in alimony that John owed her.3 For two months after
    John filed his petition to terminate or reduce his alimony obligation, he deposited the checks
    for alimony that he would otherwise pay Julie into the court’s registry.
    ¶24.   During his bench ruling, the chancellor ordered John to pay Julie $1,000 in attorney’s
    fees. According to the chancellor, the award was “contribution to [Julie] for the filing of the
    petition for contempt.” The chancellor added: “I know we had a hearing and [John]
    deposited [alimony payments] with the clerk’s office, however, the Court finds that that was
    wrongfully done and, therefore, I am going to order that amount to be paid.” The
    chancellor’s judgment memorialized his ruling by stating: “When he filed his petition, John
    . . . tendered his alimony payment into the registry of the Court for two months. The Court
    hereby orders John . . . to pay the sum of $1,000 to Julie . . . as attorney[’s] fees within thirty
    (30) days of the entry of this judgment.”
    ¶25.   John argues that the chancellor should not have awarded Julie $1,000 in attorney’s
    fees because (a) only the March 2017 alimony payment was late; (b) the chancellor did not
    find that he was willfully in contempt; (c) there was no clear and convincing evidence that
    he was in contempt; and (d) there was no evidence regarding “the work involved concerning
    attorney’s fees dealing with the contempt issue.”4
    3
    The 2005 divorce judgment failed to provide a deadline for each month’s alimony
    payment. On October 19, 2017, the chancellor entered an order stating that John must “put
    in the mail the alimony check on the first day of each and every month from this day
    forward.”
    4
    At trial, John testified that his attorney had advised him to deposit Julie’s alimony
    into the court’s registry. He does not claim on appeal that his attorney’s advice absolves him
    of the award of attorney’s fees.
    11
    ¶26.     True enough, the chancellor did not expressly find that John was in contempt for
    withholding two alimony payments, and only one of the payments was late. But the
    chancellor said that John’s withholding of Julie’s alimony was “wrongfully done” and the
    award of attorney’s fees was “contribution to [Julie] for the filing of the petition for
    contempt.” Consequently, we interpret the chancellor’s determination as though he found
    that John was in contempt for failing to timely pay Julie alimony during March 2017.
    ¶27.     As for whether it was reasonable for the chancellor to find John in contempt:
    In general, a chancellor has substantial discretion in deciding whether a party
    is in contempt. The chancellor, who sits in the unique position to observe the
    parties and their demeanor, the evidence, and the testimony, is infinitely more
    competent to decide contempt matters than we are. Because contempt is an
    issue of fact to be decided on a case-by-case basis, these matters are committed
    to the substantial discretion of the trial court. Therefore, [an appellate court]
    will not reverse a chancellor’s finding where it is supported by substantial
    credible evidence.
    Gutierrez v. Gutierrez, 
    233 So. 3d 797
    , 815 (¶46) (Miss. 2017) (brackets, citations, and
    internal quotation marks omitted). “To be found in contempt, a party has to willfully and
    deliberately violate a court order.” McKnight v. Jenkins, 
    155 So. 3d 730
    , 732 (¶7) (Miss.
    2013).
    ¶28.     Without question, John did not timely pay Julie’s March 2017 alimony. A prima facie
    case of contempt is established upon production of evidence of one’s failure to comply with
    a previous court order. McCardle v. McCardle, 
    862 So. 2d 1290
    , 1293 (¶11) (Miss. Ct. App.
    2004). John notes that in Pritchard v. Pritchard, 
    99 So. 3d 1174
    , 1179 (¶29) (Miss. Ct. App.
    2012), this Court held that an ex-husband should not have been held in contempt for
    nonpayment of alimony because the trial court should have found that his ex-wife was in a
    12
    de facto marriage. There is an obvious distinction between Pritchard and this case. As
    discussed above, it was within the chancellor’s discretion to find that John failed to prove
    that Julie was cohabiting with Raymond or that they were involved in a de facto marriage.
    By extension, John’s alimony obligation did not end, and he was reasonably held in contempt
    for withholding Julie’s March 2017 alimony.
    ¶29.   “When a party is held in contempt for violating a valid judgment of the court,
    attorney’s fees should be awarded to the party that has been forced to seek the court’s
    enforcement of its own judgment.” Heisinger v. Riley, 
    243 So. 3d 248
    , 259 (¶45) (Miss. Ct.
    App. 2018). “Fees awarded on this basis, though, should not exceed the expense incurred
    as a result of the contemptuous conduct.” 
    Id.
     “[F]ees incurred litigating other matters . . .
    are not recoverable based on the contempt.” 
    Id.
     In other words, the $1,000 in attorney’s fees
    could not be related to Julie’s defense against John’s petition to terminate alimony. It is true
    that there was no specific evidence regarding the attorney’s fees that Julie incurred related
    to John’s contempt, but we upheld a similar award in Heisinger. 
    Id.
     (citing 
    Miss. Code Ann. § 9-1-41
     (Rev. 2014) (“In any action in which a court is authorized to award reasonable
    attorneys’ fees, the court [may] make the award based on the information already before it
    and the court’s own opinion based on experience and observation . . . .”)). We decline to
    disturb the chancellor’s award of $1,000 in attorney’s fees.
    CROSS-APPEAL
    ¶30.   Julie argues that the chancellor should have awarded her $7,500 in attorney’s fees
    because that was the flat fee that her attorney charged. She says that she should not be
    13
    required to exhaust her resources to defend against John’s petition to terminate alimony. But
    the law does not require John to pay for the attorney’s fees that Julie incurred while
    defending against his petition to terminate alimony simply because he did not prevail on his
    claim. And the chancellor did not find that John’s claim was frivolous. As such, she would
    only be able to recover those fees if she is unable to pay them. Rhodes v. Rhodes, 
    52 So. 3d 430
    , 449 (¶79) (Miss. Ct. App. 2011). It is not enough that John “is more capable of paying
    her attorney’s fees.” 
    Id.
     Julie receives $2,000 per month in alimony, and she receives more
    than $1,000 per month in social security benefits. The chancellor did not abuse his discretion
    when he declined to award Julie the rest of the attorney’s fees that she incurred.
    ¶31.   Julie also requests attorney’s fees related to this appeal. Her record excerpts include
    an itemized statement indicating that her attorney charged her $2,865 for the appeal. More
    specifically, her attorney charged her $300 per hour for 8.75 hours of work, and he billed her
    an additional $240 in expenses related to filing the cross-appeal and two motions for briefing
    time. But the vast majority of Julie’s responsive brief is dedicated to the chancellor’s denial
    of John’s petition to terminate alimony. At the same time, she also had to defend against
    John’s claim that the chancellor erred by awarding her $1,000 in attorney’s fees. Thus, we
    find that Julie should be awarded some attorney’s fees. See Riley v. Riley, 
    196 So. 3d 1159
    ,
    1164-66 (¶¶23-32) (Miss. Ct. App. 2016) (holding that an award of appellate attorney’s fees
    is appropriate when the chancellor awarded fees based on a finding of contempt and the
    recipient must defend the finding on appeal). Therefore, we award Julie $500 in appellate
    attorney’s fees. See id. at 1164 (¶23) (“Generally, on appeal this Court awards attorney’s
    14
    fees of one-half of what was awarded in the trial court.”).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶32.   The chancellor did not err when he denied John’s petition to terminate or modify his
    alimony obligation. It was within the chancellor’s discretion to award Julie $1,000 related
    to John’s withholding of her March 2017 alimony but not all of the attorney’s fees she
    requested. Thus, we affirm the chancellor’s judgment. Finally, this Court awards Julie $500
    in appellate attorney’s fees.
    ¶33.   ON DIRECT APPEAL: AFFIRMED. ON CROSS-APPEAL: AFFIRMED.
    LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, CARLTON, WILSON,
    GREENLEE AND WESTBROOKS, JJ., CONCUR.             TINDELL, J., NOT
    PARTICIPATING.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: NO. 2017-CA-01542-COA

Citation Numbers: 261 So. 3d 157

Judges: Lee, Fair, Wilson

Filed Date: 12/4/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024