In Re the Marriage of Purkett ( 1986 )


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  •                                No. 8 5 - 5 1 6
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    1986
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF
    JANET LYNN PURKETT,
    Petitioner and Respondent,
    and
    RODNEY NEIL PURKETT,
    Respondent and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:    District Court of the Eighth Judicial District,
    In and for the County of Cascade,
    The Honorable John McCarvel, Judge presiding.
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Fausto G. Turrin, Great Falls, Montana
    For Respondent:
    Hilley & Loring; Emilie Loring, Great Falls,
    Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: March 6, 1 9 8 6
    Decided: July 8, 1986
    Filed:   JUL 8 - 1986
    .
    #
    z5iLL %#LClerk
    Mr. Justice L. C. Gulbrandson delivered the Opinion of the
    Court.
    Rodney Neil Purkett, the father, appeals an order of
    the   Cascade      County    District Court       increasing   his    child
    support payments to $250 per month for each of two children.
    On appeal, he raises issues concerning the District Court's
    procedure at the hearing, visitation, increased child support
    and the property settlement agreement. We affirm.
    The father and Janet Lynn Purkett, the mother, divorced
    in May     1983.     The mother was awarded custody of the two
    children with reasonable visitation to the father.                   At the
    time, the mother and father were both employed full time and
    the mother was awarded child support of $150 per month, per
    child.
    In February 1985 the mother requested an increase in
    child     support    alleging     a    change     in   circumstances     so
    substantial and continuing as to make the original payment
    unconscionable.       She had lost her job and was unable to find
    another position.           In order to prepare for a career which
    would permit her to support the children, she enrolled in
    college.      She had earned          $2,400 in    1984 from part-time
    employment.        The   father's earnings in          1984 were between
    $29,600 and $29,800.
    The father responded by alleging the mother failed to
    comply with the property settlement agreement made in 1982,
    failed to allow him reasonable visitation and made statements
    to the children in an effort to estrange them from him.                  He
    asked that she be held in contempt.             Both parties requested
    costs and attorney's fees.
    The District Court held a hearing on April 29, 1985 on
    the motions made by the parties.             The judge conducted the
    hearing in his chambers with the parties, their counsel, a
    deputy clerk of court and a court reporter present.                  After
    asking about the purpose of the hearing, the judge briefly
    questioned both parties about what issues were raised and
    then swore them in to testify.                 The questioning of the
    parties was conducted by the judge rather than counsel. He
    refused to hear testimony of a claimed vocational expert on
    potential jobs for the mother, offered by the father. Neither
    party objected to the hearing being held in chambers, the
    manner of examination or the refusal to hear testimony.
    After the hearing, the parties unsuccessfully attempted
    to reach a compromise on the issues.             On July 15, 1985, the
    mother submitted proposed findings of fact, conclusions of
    law and order.      The father offered none.         The District Court
    adopted the mother's proposed findings, conclusions and order
    verbatim.     The mother was           found not to be     in contempt
    concerning    the     claimed   visitation      restrictions   and     the
    argument    over    the     property    settlement    agreement.      The
    District Court found a lack of substantial evidence that she
    had attempted to estrange the children from their father.
    The father was ordered to pay the increased child support
    with the mother retaining custody and the father retaining
    liberal visitation.       Each party was responsible for their own
    costs and attorney's fees.        The order was in accord with the
    District Court's verbal instructions at the hearing.
    The father appeals this order raising three issues:
    (1) Did the District Court violate the father's right
    to   due    process    by     holding    the    hearing   in   chambers,
    questioning the parties and refusing offered evidence?
    (2)    Do the findings of fact on the need for increased
    child support and the failure to make findings of fact on the
    visitation dispute constitute clear error?
    (3) Did the District Court err by concluding there was
    not substantial evidence of noncompliance with the property
    settlement agreement?
    In the first issue the father argues that he did not
    object to the procedural improprieties because to do so would
    have been fruitless and that counsel for the father did not
    want to alienate the judge, even though he felt the procedure
    used constituted plain error.       He urges this Court to address
    the issue because this amounted to a failure to receive a
    fair    and    impartial judge thus affecting his       substantial
    rights.       Rule 103 (d), M. R. Evid. , permits this Court to take
    "notice of plain errors affecting substantial rights although
    they were not brought to the attention of the court."             In
    Halldorson v. Halldorson (1977), 
    175 Mont. 170
    , 
    573 P.2d 169
    ,
    a   marriage       dissolution   proceeding,    the   trial    judge
    discontinued the trial after the wife testified but before
    the husband presented his case.         Neither party objected and
    the trial was never reconvened.       This Court adopted the plain
    error   doctrine     permitting a    reviewing court to     consider
    whether a trial court deprived a litigant of a fair and
    impartial trial, even though no objection had been made.
    However,
    [tlhe Montana Commission on Rules of
    Evidence has emphasized that the plain
    error   doctrine   "will be    used     in
    exceptional cases and should not be
    relied upon by counsel."      Commission
    Comments,   Rule    103 (d) Mont. R. Evid.
    (1977). Indeed, in Halldorson, supra, we
    held that "the [plain error] exception
    will not be applied where the failure or
    refusal to raise the issue in the trial
    court was conscious and intentional on
    the part of trial counsel."          175 Mont. at
    174, 573 P.2d at 172.
    Reno v. Erickstein       (Mont. 1984), 
    679 P.2d 1204
    , 1207, 41
    St.Rep. 537, 540.       Here, counsel for the father decided as a
    matter of "trial tactics" to not object in order to avoid
    alienating the judge.       This was a conscious and intentional
    choice on his part.      As such, the plain error exception will
    not be applied.      "It has long been the rule of this Court
    that on appeal we will not put a District Court in error for
    a ruling or procedure in which the appellant acquiesced,
    participated, or     to which      appellant made       no objection."
    (Citations omitted.)       Green v. Green (1978), 
    176 Mont. 532
    ,
    536, 
    579 P.2d 1235
    , 1237.        We    hold   that the        father's
    voluntary participation in the procedures of which he now
    complains and the intentional choice to not object precludes
    this Court's review of this issue.
    In the second issue the father argues that no findings
    were made on the question of visitation and that the record
    does not support the findings on increased child support.
    The District Court addressed the visitation issue by finding
    the father had been awarded reasonable visitation and noting
    he alleged the mother had not permitted the visitation and
    she had made efforts to estrange the children from him.                The
    District Court concluded that there was a lack of substantial
    evidence   that   the    mother    had     attempted    or    caused   any
    estrangement.     In a discussion, the District Court cautioned
    the parties against disparaging one another in front of the
    children and encouraged liberal visitation.                  Finally, the
    District Court stated in its order that the father retained
    liberal visitation.         We    find no    merit     in    the   father's
    contention that the question of visitation was not addressed.
    Section 40-4-208 (2)(b), MCA, states the requirements
    for modifying child support:
    Whenever   the   decree    proposed   for
    modification contains provisions relating
    to      maintenance      or      support,
    modification    ...may   only be made:
    (i)   upon    a      showing    of   changed
    circumstances        SO   substantial    and
    continuing   as      to   make   the   terms
    unconscionable.
    The standard of review is whether a district court abused its
    discretion in modifying the amount of child support.               In re
    the Marriage of Firman (Mont. 1980), 
    610 P.2d 178
    , 37 St.Rep.
    888.       The    father   must   show   that   "the    facts     clearly
    preponderate against the District Court's              ruling to gain
    reversal."       (Citation omitted.)     In re Marriage of McNeff
    (Mont. 1983), 
    673 P.2d 473
    , 475, 40 St.Rep.            2050, 2051.    In
    McNeff, this Court held that the mother's loss of her job was
    a sufficient change in circumstances to make the original
    amount           support   unconscionable.      There,     this    Court
    considered the relative needs and abilities of the parties
    and "how close to this balance the present arrangement is."
    McNeff, 673 P.2d at 475, 40 St.Rep. at 2052.
    In the case at bar, the record and                findings both
    reflect the following:       (1) the mother requested an increase
    in child support after she lost her full-time job; (2) she
    was unable to find other full-time employment and enrolled in
    college to prepare for a career which would enable her to
    support the children; (3) in 1984, she earned $2,400 from
    employment; and (4) the father puts a substantial portion of
    his income into savings and tithing to his church.                   The
    findings also noted that by using the parties' 1984 income
    from their W-2 forms and applying the formula developed in
    Carlson v. Carlson (Mont. 1984), 
    693 P.2d 496
    , 41 St.Rep.
    2419, the father's total child support would be about $514
    per month.     When these figures were discussed at the hearing
    the father did not challenge the figures used or the result
    of applying the Carlson formula.             The mother's loss of her
    job was a      sufficient change in circumstances to              justify
    raising     child   support.      The     findings are based      on   the
    standards of 5 40-4-208(2) (b), MCA, and are in accord with
    the decision in McNeff, supra.             We hold that the District
    Court did not err by increasing the amount of child support.
    The     father    also    objects    to    the   District   Court's
    verbatim    adoption of        the mother's     proposed     findings and
    conclusions.        We continue to disapprove of the wholesale
    adoption of proposed findings submitted by a party.                See In
    re Marriage of Jensen (Mont. 1981), 
    631 P.2d 700
    , 703, 38
    St.Rep. 1109, 1113.       However, such adoption is not error per
    se.
    -     Here, as in In re Marriage of Benner (Mont. 1985) , 
    711 P.2d 802
    , 805, 42 St.Rep. 1943, 1947, the proposed findings
    are "sufficiently comprehensive and pertinent to the issues
    to provide a basis for decision and              . . . are   supported by
    the evidence presented."         We will not reverse on this basis.
    The father claimed below that the mother failed to
    comply with the property settlement agreement.                  His third
    issue on     appeal is whether the District Court erred by
    concluding substantial evidence did not support this claim.
    This Court will not disturb the findings and conclusions of a
    district court if they are supported by substantial, credible
    evidence.     In re Marriage of Sarsfield (Mont. 1983), 
    695 P.2d 473
    , 40 St.Rep.        1736.     The evidence is viewed in light
    favorable to the prevailing party.              Lacey v. Herndon (Mont.
    1983), 
    668 P.2d 251
    , 40 St.Rep.      1375.      Here, the father
    argued that the mother sold tools which were his under the
    terms of the property settlement agreement.          The District
    Court noted that the decree did not itemize the tools.          The
    mother testified that, after an argument over other personal
    property, she told the father to take all of his things from
    the house so that he would not blame her for any further
    missing items.     She stated that he took "every imaginable
    tool."   She then sold an air compressor that remained at the
    house.    The    father sought   to    have   the mother held    in
    contempt, claiming she sold a ladder, a wheel barrow, and an
    air   compressor which   were    tools   awarded   to him   in the
    property settlement agreement.        At trial he admitted taking
    all the tools he could find from the house.          The District
    Court concluded that this evidence showed the father took all
    the personal property he wanted and that there was a lack of
    substantial evidence     showing any     noncompliance with     the
    property settlement agreement.        Viewing the evidence in a
    light favorable to the mother, we hold that the District
    Court's findings and conclusions are supported by substantial
    credible evidence.                                    ,/
    We Concur: