Jessen v. Jessen
1991 WY 63
810 P.2d 987
Case Number: 90-115
Decided: 05/03/1991
Supreme Court of Wyoming
KENT JESSEN, Appellant (Defendant),
v.
TINA
MARIE JESSEN, Appellee (Plaintiff)
Appeal
from the District Court for Laramie County, the Honorable Nicholas G.
Kalokathis, Judge.
Bernard
E. Cole and Douglas J. Moench, Jr., Cheyenne, for
appellant.
Rocky
L. Edmonds, Cheyenne, for
appellee.
Before Urbigkit, C.J., and Thomas, Cardine,
Macy, and Golden, JJ.
URBIGKIT, Chief
Justice.
[1.] After the child support
payments were brought current pursuant to our prior decision and order in this
appeal, Jessen v. Jessen, 802 P.2d 901 (Wyo. 1990) (Jessen I), we
now examine the validity for Jessen II of a child support late payment
provision entered into by the parties. We reverse.
INTRODUCTION
[2.] Presented is the
validity of a post-divorce decree stipulated modification entered into by
appellant, Kent Jessen (husband) and appellee, Tina Jessen (wife), which
requires husband to make very substantial "late charge" payments to wife in the
event husband continues to be late in making his child support payments. Husband
had paid nearly every support payment late, if paid at all. The district court,
in a hearing on a notice to show cause, found husband in contempt for failure to
make child support payments and entered a judgment in favor of wife for past due child support and
late charges (compounded interest) totalling $ 13,275. At the time of husband's
initial appeal, he had not purged himself of the contempt even to the extent of
satisfying delinquent child support obligations.
[3.] This court computed the
total amount of child support remaining unpaid through October 1, 1990 as $
3,483.71, with additional amounts of $ 325 due in November and $ 325 due in
December. Based on our decision in Connors v. Connors, 769 P.2d 336 (Wyo.
1989), we retained jurisdiction and temporarily remanded to the district court
for a period of two months from the date of publication of the opinion, December
20, 1990, to allow husband to pay the outstanding child support payment
obligations in order to purge himself of the contempt.1 Jessen I, 802 P.2d 901. If
husband did not purge his contempt status, the order of the district court would
have become final and wife would have been allowed to enforce the entire
judgment of April 13, 1990 in accord with its terms. Having received
confirmation that husband brought the outstanding child support payments current
within the specified two month period, this court now proceeds to determine the
further pending appellate issues raised by husband.
ISSUES
[4.] Is the creation of a "late fee" by a child support obligee an assessment of penalty and hence, unlawful and unenforceable?
[5.] Is the creation of a
"late fee" by a child support obligee permissible where the assessment is so
large/egregious as to be unconscionable?
[6.] Can a money judgment
including an amount for a "late fee" created to force payment of child support,
be enforced by calling it "liquidated damages" where there is no evidence of
damage?
FACTS
[7.] The parties were
divorced in 1982. The decree provided that husband was to pay wife $ 250 per
month for support of their one minor child, but that provision was modified
following nonpayment collection proceedings by stipulation and an order entered
December 20, 1984 which included:
8.
That the Defendant [husband] shall pay to the Plaintiff [wife] the sum of $
325.00 (Three hundred twenty-five) dollars per month for child support of the
child until the child reaches the age of majority, marries, becomes
self-supporting, or is emancipated. Said payments are to be made to the Clerk of
the District Court, Laramie
County, Cheyenne, Wyoming and shall be in the form of money
order, certified check, or cash. The first payment shall begin on the first day
of May, 1984 and like payments on the first day of each month thereafter. If the
Defendant is late paying his child support payment, then a late fee charge of
10% (ten percent) per day for the first 10 days and $ 5.00 (five) dollars per
day thereafter shall be charged on said late child support
payment.
[8.] On May 29, 1985,
husband filed a petition to modify the divorce decree, asking that child support
be reduced to the original $ 250 per month and that the "penalty in paragraph 8
[quoted above] * * * be stricken as constituting an imposition of such a penalty
as to be onerous and working a hardship on Defendant [husband]." Other issues,
including visitation in particular, were raised in the 1985 proceeding. However,
the district court declined to modify paragraph 8 of the 1984 stipulation in any
way and no appeal was taken.
[9.] On July 6, 1989, wife
filed a petition for order to show cause, for judgment, and to modify the
divorce decree. The petition sought to compel husband to pay arrearage in his
child support of $ 1,855, as well as other relief. That petition was dismissed
with the consent of both husband and wife. On December 29, 1989, wife filed
another motion asking that husband be required to satisfy unpaid child support
obligations and late charges which
could total the computed sum of $ 230,157. A hearing was held before the
district court commissioner on February 26, 1990, and his report was filed with
the district court on February 28, 1990. Husband defended by claiming he was
coerced into signing the late charge agreement. However, based on the late
charge agreement which he validated, the commissioner recommended to the
district court that husband be required to pay wife $ 13,275, some of which was
for support owed and the majority of which was late charges as a penalty
interest assessment. The commissioner found that the amount owed by husband for
late child support, at the rate of $ 325 per month, was $ 3,575 as of February
26, 1990.
[10.] On April 13, 1990, the district court
entered its judgment, based on the report of the court commissioner, and
directed husband to pay $ 13,275 for past due child support and late charges to
and including February 26, 1990,2 and found husband in contempt for
failure to pay child support. The contempt citation sentenced husband to three
months in the Laramie County Detention Center and provided that he could purge
himself of contempt by (a) paying $ 308.71 for wife's attorney's fees and costs,
and (b) providing security on non-exempt property satisfactory to the district
court to secure payment of child support as a guarantee of all future support
obligations. In addition, husband was ordered to make all child support payments
to the clerk of the district court and any payments he made directly to wife
would be considered gifts. The district court also continued the child support
obligation at $ 325 per month (husband had asked it to be modified to the
original sum of $ 250 per month) and authorized wife to execute on the security
required to be posted with the district court in the event husband was ever
again late in making his child support payments. An order directing income
withholding under the Income Withholding Act, W.S. 20-6-201 through 20-6-222,
was also entered. Husband filed a timely notice of appeal challenging the orders
of the district court.
[11.] On May 11, 1990, wife filed yet another
petition seeking a finding of contempt against husband because he had failed to
comply with the district court's April 13, 1990 judgment. On July 19, 1990,
because of husband's delinquency, she filed a "Motion to Dismiss Appeal, or in
the Alternative Motion for Order Allowing Supplementation of Record" with this
court. Although the May 11 petition had not been disposed of in the district
court, this court issued an order on August 7, 1990, allowing the current
proceeding in the district court to be made a part of the record on appeal. On
the basis of the motion submitted, this court initially declined to dismiss the
appeal before briefing on wife's contention that the issues raised by husband in
his appeal were res judicata because they had been litigated and resolved
against husband in the 1985 proceeding from which no appeal had been
taken.
[12.] Based on our decision in Connors,
769 P.2d 336, this court retained jurisdiction and remanded to the district
court for a period of two months from the date of publication of the opinion,
December 20, 1990, to permit husband to satisfy outstanding child support
payment obligations which, if not satisfied within that time, would have
resulted in dismissal of husband's appeal. In Connors, we addressed a
court's power to deny summarily the demands of litigants who persist in defying
the legal orders and processes of jurisdiction, including dismissal of an appeal
by a litigant who continues to be in contempt of court in the proceeding from
which he seeks to appeal. We declined to adopt an absolute dismissal rule, but
opted instead to follow a bright line rule, i.e., where one
who is charged with contempt and makes no meaningful, good faith effort to
comply with the order on which the contempt citation is based, we will likely
dismiss the appeal. Id. at 342.
[13.] The record revealed that husband had the
financial ability to comply with the district court's order, at least to the
extent that he is required to pay all arrearage in his child support
obligations. Based upon the commissioner's report, this court computed the total
amount of support remaining unpaid through October 1, 1990 as $ 3,483.71, with
additional amounts of $ 325 for November and $ 325 for December
due.
[14.] Having received confirmation that husband
brought the outstanding child support payments current within the specified two
month period, this court now determines the substantive appellate issue raised
by husband of the enforceability of the "late charge" agreement. The contested
language was 10% per day for ten days and $ 5 per day thereafter. This is an
interest application for each late monthly payment of $ 325 if not paid in ten
days and $ 5 per day thereafter. The agreed late charges for a thirty-day month
would create an additional obligation of $ 425 total if not then paid to
continue with the next monthly payment to accrue an additional add on of $ 325
after ten days' delinquency. The penalty factor was mathematically
"real".
ANALYSIS
[15.] Husband contends these provisions of the
parties' stipulated agreement by creating a "late fee" constitutes a penalty
and, as such, should not be enforceable against him. We agree. The commissioner
characterized the clause as a liquidated damages clause when in reality it is a
punitive measure. Factually, it was real and it was
punitive.
[16.] While provisions for liquidated damages
are widely recognized as valid and enforceable, courts will not enforce
liquidated damages clauses that are punitive in nature. Walker v. Graham, 706 P.2d 278, 281
(Wyo. 1985); American Financial Leasing
& Services Co. v. Miller, 41 Ohio App.
2d 69, 322 N.E.2d 149, 151, 70 Ohio Op. 2d 64 (1974). Whether or not a
provision for liquidated damages amounts to a penalty depends upon the
circumstances of each individual case, and the question is resolved as a matter
of law. Walker, 706 P.2d 278; Marcam
Mortg. Corp. v. Black, 686 P.2d 575, 580 (Wyo. 1984); Ruckelshaus v. Broward County School Bd., 494 F.2d 1164, 1165 (5th
Cir. 1974). See Abel Const. Co. v. School Dist. of Seward, Seward County,
188 Neb. 205, 195 N.W.2d 744 (1972); Babler Bros., Inc. v. Hebener, 267
Or. 414, 517 P.2d 653 (1973); and Dave Gastafson & Co. v. State, 83
S.D. 160, 156 N.W.2d 185 (1968).
[17.] In Ray v. Electrical Products
Consolidated, 390 P.2d 607, 608 (Wyo. 1964), we adopted the definition of a
provision for liquidated damages found in Restatement of Contracts 339 at 552
(1932):
"(1)
An agreement, made in advance of breach, fixing the damages
therefor, is not enforceable as a contract and does not affect the damages
recoverable for the breach, unless
"(a)
the amount so fixed is a reasonable forecast of just compensation for the harm
that is caused by the breach, and
"(b)
the harm that is caused by the breach is one that is incapable or very difficult
of accurate estimation."
[18.] However, if the liquidated damages bear
no reasonable relationship to the amount of actual damages sustained by a
breach, they will constitute an unenforceable penalty. Walker, 706 P.2d
at 282; Ray, 390 P.2d at 609.
[19.] The New York Supreme Court, Appellate
Division, decided a case with very similar facts to the case at bar. Willner
v. Willner, 145 A.D.2d 236, 538 N.Y.S.2d 599 (1989). After the parties were
divorced, the husband moved and the wife cross-moved for modification of the
husband's child support and alimony obligations. The parties stipulated that in
the event of husband's default of seven days after written notice of arrears in
child support, husband would pay an additional sum of $ 110 per week for an
extended period of time, retroactive to March 2, 1984, approximately the date of
the agreement. In August 1986, wife moved for leave to enter a judgment for
arrears. By the time the hearing on the motions was concluded in March 1987,
the purported liquidated damages had accrued to $ 17,490 (159 weeks at $ 110 per
week). The husband successfully challenged the validity of the liquidated
damages clause on the ground that it constituted a "penalty" against public
policy.
[20.] The New York court relied on the following rule to
determine if the purported liquidated damages clause was valid or if it
constituted an unenforceable penalty:
"If the amount stipulated in the liquidated damage clause is
manifestly disproportionate to the actual damage, then its purpose is not to
'provide fair compensation but to secure performance by the compulsion of the
very disproportion' * * *."
Willner,
538 N.Y.S.2d at 602 (quoting X.L.O. Concrete Corp. v. John T. Brady and
Co., 104 A.D.2d 181, 482 N.Y.S.2d 476 (1984), aff'd. 66 N.Y.2d 970,
498 N.Y.S.2d 799, 489 N.E.2d 768 (1985)).
[21.] Further, the Willner court held
that where there is doubt as to whether a provision
constitutes an unenforceable penalty or a proper liquidated damage clause, it
should be resolved in favor of a construction which holds the provision to be a
penalty. Willner, 145 A.D.2d 236, 538 N.Y.S.2d 599.
[22.] In Marcam Mortg. Corp., 686 P.2d
at 581 n. 3, this court cites the U.C.C. as evidence of the state's public
policy on liquidated damages clauses as unenforceable
penalties:
Wyoming public policy in
this respect is evidenced by 34-21-297(a), W.S. 1977 (Uniform Commercial
Code):
"(a)
Damages for breach by either party may be liquidated in the agreement but only
at an amount which is reasonable in light of the anticipated or actual harm
caused by the breach, the difficulties of proof of loss, and the inconvenience
or nonfeasibility of otherwise obtaining an adequate remedy. A term fixing
unreasonable large liquidated damages is void as a
penalty."
[23.] When the principles of "liquidated
damages" law are applied to the facts of this case, it is clear that the late
fee provision created a penalty plainly disproportionate to the actual damages.
The judgment entered by the district court was for $ 13,275 of which $ 9,700 was
punitive. Further, the actual loss attributed to husband's late payments could
have been easily ascertained; therefore, applying liquidated damages in this
situation was inappropriate.
[24.] In this case, the parties agreed to a
method of calculating late fees "borrowed" from a penalty provision found in the
wife's lease agreement with her landlord. Wife alleged that husband's late
payments created financial difficulties for her which in turn caused her to make
late payments to her landlord and subjected her to penalties. However, nothing in the record supports
the wife's actual loss in the amount of $ 9,700 or the originally claimed $
230,157. There is no evidence that she was required to pay her landlord a
penalty on even one occasion. Thus, the record is wholly insufficient to support
either actual damages or a penalty so disproportionate to the underlying
obligation. In Walker, 706 P.2d 278, we reversed
the trial court where we found an earnest money deposit had no reasonable
relationship to actual damages. To do otherwise in this case would allow an
unconscionable and unjust result.
[25.] It is significant to note that child support obligees, as distinguished from obligees seeking
enforcement of other money judgments, have been provided with the remedy of
contempt and possible incarceration. W.S. 20-2-113(a).3 In addition, the state has mandated the entry of an income
withholding order upon entry of a child support order, W.S. 20-2-113(e), thus
providing the child support obligee with another effective means of enforcing
the support order. Thus, the child support obligee has sufficient remedies
available which lend further support to our holding that excessive liquidated
damages and penalty provisions are not necessarily appropriate remedies for
enforcement of child support obligations.
CONCLUSION
[26.] In conclusion, we find that the paragraph
at issue in the parties' stipulated agreement creates a penalty, rather than
liquidated damages, and is unenforceable as a matter of law and public policy.
This decision is confined by the facts presented and doe not determine that
every late charge agreement in support obligation settlements will be
invalidated. We have no problem finding a manifest disproportionate payment
here. Willner, 145 A.D.2d 236, 538 N.Y.S.2d 599.
[27.] Remanded for further proceedings in
conformity herewith.
FOOTNOTES
1This court did not require husband to pay the punitive penalty late charges" and that amount of a little less than $ 9,700.00 remains unpaid.
2The wife's stated reason for insisting on the late charge agreement was because she was required to pay late fees to her landlord for late rental payments on a basis similar to the terms incorporated in the late charge agreement. The record does not show what amount of late charges she was ever required to pay, other than that it was "costing [her] a fortune."
3W.S. 20-2-113(a) (July Supp. 1990) provides in pertinent part:
The court has continuing subject
matter and personal jurisdiction to enforce or revise the decree concerning the
care, custody, visitation and maintenance of the children as the circumstances
of the parents and the benefit of the children requires. The court may, upon its
own motion or the motion of either parent, require a parent to appear before the
court and show just cause why the parent should not be held in contempt of the
court, upon a showing that the parent has willfully violated the court's decree
as to the care, custody, visitation and maintenance of the children. The court
may, in addition to any assessment it may impose upon a finding that the parent
is in contempt of court, award attorney's fees, costs, and such other and
further relief as the court may deem necessary under the circumstances, to the
parent aggrieved by the violation of the court's decree, in order to enforce and
require future compliance with its decree.
Citationizer Summary of Documents Citing This Document
Cite | Name | Level | |
---|---|---|---|
Wyoming Supreme Court Cases | |||
Cite | Name | Level | |
1992 WY 53, 830 P.2d 429, | Wolin v. Walker | Cited | |
1991 WY 78, 811 P.2d 721, | Morehead v. Morehead | Cited | |
2000 WY 150, 7 P.3d 906, | G.C.I. v. HAUGHT | Cited |
Cite | Name | Level | |
---|---|---|---|
Wyoming Supreme Court Cases | |||
Cite | Name | Level | |
1964 WY 21, 390 P.2d 607, | Ray v. Electrical Products Consolidated | Cited | |
1984 WY 73, 686 P.2d 575, | Marcam Mortg. Corp. v. Black | Cited | |
1985 WY 149, 706 P.2d 278, | Walker v. Graham | Discussed at Length | |
1989 WY 34, 769 P.2d 336, | Connors v. Connors | Discussed | |
1990 WY 153, 802 P.2d 901, | Jessen v. Jessen | Discussed |