TRACEY ANN TAVERNA vs. MICHAEL D. PIZZI.
DOCKET SJC-08136
Dates: February 7, 2000 - March 8, 2000
Present Marshall, C.J., Abrams, Lynch, Greaney, Ireland, Spina, & Cowin, JJ.
County Middlesex.
Complaint for divorce filed in the Middlesex Division of the Probate and
Family Court Department on September 4, 1984.
A complaint for modification, filed on February 6, 1996, was heard by
William Highgas, Jr., J.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the case from
the Appeals Court.
Michael P. Henry for the defendant.
Carl E. D'Angio, Jr., for the plaintiff.
GREANEY, J. The plaintiff and the defendant were married on June 30, 1983.
In September, 1984, the plaintiff filed a petition seeking a divorce under G.
L. c. 208, § 1A, alleging an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. The
petition was accompanied by the necessary affidavit attesting to the breakdown,
and by an executed separation agreement, which provided that "[t]here have
been no children born of [the] marriage and there is no child in esse."
The separation agreement additionally provided that it was to be incorporated
into, but not merged with, the judgment of divorce. A judge in the Probate and
Family Court approved the separation agreement, and ordered the entry of a
judgment of divorce nisi on April 3, 1985. The divorce became final on October
3, 1985. On October 7, 1985, the plaintiff gave birth to a girl.
On February 6, 1996, the plaintiff filed a complaint in the Probate and
Family Court against the defendant under G. L. c. 209C, § 3 (a), seeking
orders establishing paternity and providing for payment of child support. The
defendant acknowledged paternity, and a temporary order of child support
entered. A Probate Court judge held an evidentiary hearing on the complaint,
after which he dismissed the complaint, and transferred the case to the divorce
docket. The judge then vacated that portion of the judgment of divorce
approving the separation agreement and modified the judgment of divorce to (a)
grant the plaintiff sole legal and physical custody of the child, with the
defendant to have visitation as mutually agreed on; (b) determine that the
defendant was responsible for paying child support from the date of the child's
birth to the date on which he commenced paying child support pursuant to the
temporary order previously entered, in an amount of $200 each week, obtained by
wage assignment; (c) order the defendant to acquire a life insurance policy on
his life in the amount of $150,000, designating the child as the irrevocable
beneficiary thereunder; (d) direct the defendant to establish a college
education fund for the child by depositing $50 each week into such account with
any unspent principal and interest in the fund to be given outright to the
child when she reached twenty-three years of age; (e) order the defendant to
convey to the plaintiff a fifty per cent interest in his 401K retirement plan;
and (f) establish past due child support owed by the defendant in the amount of
$50,000, with payment of that sum to be made within five years in the form of
monthly payments to the plaintiff made through an interest bearing promissory
note secured by the defendant's interest in a parcel of real estate jointly
owned by the defendant and his brother. The defendant appealed from the
judgment dismissing the plaintiff's complaint under G. L. 209C, and from the
amended divorce judgment. We transferred the case here on our motion. We
conclude that the judge's orders should be upheld with the exception of the
order distributing the balance of the college educational fund to the child
when she reaches twenty-three years of age, and the order conveying fifty per
cent of the defendant's 401K account to the plaintiff.
1. The defendant argues that the judge had no authority, once he dismissed
the complaint under G. L. c. 209C, to award retroactive child support as part
of a modification of the divorce judgment. We disagree.
The judge was concerned with the fact that the child was conceived during
the marriage, while the plaintiff and the defendant were separated, but born
four days after the parties' divorce had become final. The judge indicated that
he did not want to enter "a judgment of paternity that . . . [the child]
is an illegitimate child." The judge stated, "[S]he is not a child
born out of wedlock. This is a child that was born of a legitimate marriage of
two people . . . [a]nd . . . a complaint to establish paternity [should not
have been brought]." The judge concluded that the matter should be handled
as part of the divorce because "it matters for the child's sake, who is
unrepresented, that . . . she is a legitimate child, born of a legitimate
marriage." Thus, the judge proceeded to deal with the issues concerning
present and past child support in connection with the divorce, treating the
proceedings, in substance, as based on a complaint seeking modification.
The defendant concedes in his brief, as he must, that "[h]ad [the case]
gone to judgment on [the] [p]aternity [c]omplaint, there is no question that
the [c]ourt had the authority to award retroactive child support under [c.]
209C." See G. L. c. 209C, § 9 (a), which provides, in pertinent part,
that "[u]pon the petition of a party, the court shall also order past
support for the period from the birth of the child to the entry of the order .
. . ." He also acknowledges, as he must, that a father is obligated to
support his minor children. See G. L. c. 273, § 1; Fennell v. Russell, 282
Mass. 67, 71 (1933). We note that G. L. c. 208, § 28, authorizes a probate
judge to make postdivorce judgment modification orders with respect to
"the care, custody and maintenance of the minor children of the
parties," when there is a "material and substantial change in the
circumstances," and "modification is necessary in the best interests
of the children." In addition, when child support is ordered, pursuant to
G. L. c. 208, § 36, "the court may require sufficient security for
its payment." See G. L. c. 208, § 12 ("real and personal
property of the other spouse may be attached" to secure child support
obligation).
We need not ponder over the precise course of the judge's authority with
respect to the retroactive child support orders. The judge clearly had the
power, pursuant to the general equity jurisdiction conferred on the Probate and
Family Court Department by G. L. c. 215, § 6, if from no other source, to
consider the child a legitimate child of the parties; to order the defendant to
make ongoing weekly payments of child support for her; to determine, and order
paid by the defendant, past child support; and to provide for payment with
suitable security for the $50,000 amount computed as the past support owed.
Wood v. Wood, 369 Mass. 665, 669 (1976).
2. We conclude as well that the order directing the defendant to obtain a
life insurance policy in the amount of $150,000 for the benefit of the child
was proper. The child has suffered from birth with serious health problems
requiring extensive medical care. At the time of the hearing we are reviewing,
she was almost twelve years old. She was born with distal arthrogryposis,(1) a
disabling condition. The plaintiff testified that the child "has no
movement in her feet, or her wrists, or her shoulders. She's had [numerous
medical procedures and] her fifteenth surgery will be coming up." The
evidence warranted findings that the defendant had denied, and had evaded, his
financial duty to care for the child over the years, and that the plaintiff had
been compelled to deal with, emotionally, and to some extent financially, the
hardships caused by raising a physically challenged child. Those hardships and
expenses would continue. In view of these considerations, an order providing
for the child's future needs by means of life insurance in the event of the
defendant's death was within the judge's discretion. See G. L. c. 208,
§§ 28, 36; Pare v. Pare, 409 Mass. 292, 300 (1991).
3. In Passemato v. Passemato, 427 Mass. 52, 54 (1998), we stated that,
"as a general rule, support orders regarding the future payment of
post-high school educational costs are premature and should not be made,"
but we indicated that such orders would be upheld when the particular facts of
the case justified them. In view of the factual considerations stated in Part 2
of this opinion,(2) we are satisfied that the order directing the defendant to
establish a college education fund for the child was warranted. We conclude,
however, that the order should not have provided for the distribution of any
unexpended amounts in the fund to the child when she reaches twenty-three years
of age. In our view, that portion of the order is tantamount to an
impermissible assignment of marital property to a child of the parties under G.
L. c. 208, § 34, see id. at 56, and it must be vacated.
4. The order vacating the separation agreement so that the plaintiff can be
awarded fifty per cent of the defendant's 401K fund cannot stand. The
separation agreement is complete and final on its face. The agreement provided
for a settlement and division of all the marital assets of the parties under G.
L. c. 208, § 34; dealt with the issue of alimony; and expressly provided
that it would "not be merged into the judgment[] of divorce, but shall
survive the same and be . . . forever binding upon the [h]usband and
[w]ife." The plaintiff's complaint under G. L. c. 209C, could not, and did
not, seek any assignment of the defendant's property. There was no claim, and
no evidence at the evidentiary hearing, that the separation agreement had been
procured by fraud, misrepresentation, concealment of assets, mistake, or duress
on the part of the defendant, thereby possibly warranting modification. See
Nagle v. Nagle, 15 Mass. App. Ct. 337, 338 n.1 (1983); Kirtz v. Kirtz, 12 Mass.
App. Ct. 141, 145 (1981). The parties' separation agreement was final on the
matters contemplated by G. L. c. 208, § 34, and under the traditional rule
that a judgment concerning the division of marital property is not subject to
modification, see Drapek v. Drapek, 399 Mass. 240, 244 (1987), which applies
here, should not have been set aside so that fifty per cent of the defendant's
401K fund could be assigned to the plaintiff more than ten years after the
divorce became final.(3) Despite the infirmities mentioned in the orders
pertaining to the life insurance and the division of the defendant's 401K
account, we conclude that the judge acted responsibly in addressing the past
and continuing support obligations of the defendant so that the compelling
needs of the child could be ameliorated.
5. So much of paragraph 4 of the amended divorce judgment that vacates the
separation agreement of the parties is set aside, and there is substituted
therefor an order approving and adopting the agreement. So much of paragraph 10
of the amended divorce judgment that provides for the payment of the balance
remaining in the college educational fund to the child when she reaches
twenty-three years of age is vacated, and, in its place, it is provided that
the balance is to be paid to the husband at that time. Paragraph 11 of the
amended divorce judgment, assigning fifty per cent of the defendant's 401K
account to the plaintiff, is vacated. The remainder of the amended divorce
judgment is affirmed.
So ordered. _____________________
Footnotes:
(1) "Arthrogryposis" is defined as a
"[c]ongenital defect of the limbs characterized by contractures of
joints." Stedman's Medical Dictionary 150 (26th ed. 1995).
"Distal" is defined as "[s]ituated away from the center of the
body, or from the point of origin; specifically applied to the extremity or
distant part of a limb or organ." Id. at 511.
(2) The defendant does not contend that he is unable to comply with either
the judge's order to pay $50 a week toward the child's college educational fund
or any of the judge's other financial orders.
(3) We note also that the judge made no specific findings indicating that he
had considered the mandatory factors set forth in G. L. c. 208, § 34, and
adequately supporting the order that directed the assignment, which the amended
judgment stated was a "distribution . . . by way of division of assets
pursuant to G. L. c. 208, [§] 34." See Pare v. Pare, 409 Mass. 292,
296 (1991).
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