Deveaux Carter v. Allen Davis
235 So. 3d 106
Miss. Ct. App. Hist.2017Background
- Allen Davis and Deveaux Carter divorced in 1993 by an agreement resolving custody, support, and property; Deveaux received custody of two children (Annie b.1986, Amy b.1991).
- The divorce decree required Allen to pay child support, medical insurance/expenses, extracurricular and college costs.
- In 1998 the parties entered an agreed order: monthly support set at $400 and a judgment entered for prior arrearages (amended to ~$23,183); payment schedule and interest were set.
- In 2013, after the younger child’s emancipation, Deveaux filed for contempt alleging a large cumulative arrearage including college and medical costs; at trial some figures were stipulated (Amy’s college costs $30,000; medical expenses $10,000).
- The chancellor computed Allen’s total obligations at $201,187.66, credited him for direct payments by him and payments from his mother (Isabella Mann) and others totaling $197,911, and entered a judgment for an arrearage of $3,276.66; the chancellor also awarded Deveaux $7,500 in attorney’s fees.
- On appeal, Deveaux challenged credits given for payments by Mann and post-emancipation payments; Allen cross-appealed the award of attorney’s fees because the chancellor did not find willful contempt.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument (Deveaux) | Defendant's Argument (Allen) | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether grandparent (Mann) payments can be credited against Allen's child-support arrearage | Mann's payments should not offset Allen; Mizell prohibits crediting a grandparent’s payments | Grandparent paid her own money in lieu of Allen; credits appropriate | Court held credit for Mann’s payments was within chancellor’s discretion and affirmed |
| Whether Allen’s direct payments to adult/college children can be credited against arrearage | Payments made directly to children (including post-emancipation college payments) should not reduce arrearage | Direct payments were made for children’s support/necessities and to avoid unjust enrichment of Deveaux | Court held chancellor did not abuse discretion in crediting Allen for direct payments |
| Whether contempt finding was willful and whether attorney’s fees should be awarded | Deveaux sought fees because she was forced to enforce the judgment | Allen argued fees improper because chancellor found no willful contempt | Court reversed fee award: cannot award attorney’s fees where chancellor did not find willful contempt |
| Whether appellant (Deveaux) is entitled to attorney’s fees on appeal under M.R.A.P. 38 | Requests appellate fees; alternatively one-half of trial award | Allen opposed | Court denied appellate fees (Rule 38 applies to frivolous appeals; trial fee award reversed so no appellate fee) |
Key Cases Cited
- Mizell v. Mizell, 708 So. 2d 55 (Miss. 1998) (grandparent payments not creditable where funds already belonged to child)
- Crow v. Crow, 622 So. 2d 1226 (Miss. 1993) (noncustodial parent may receive credit for direct payments to/for benefit of child to avoid unjust enrichment)
- Nichols v. Tedder, 547 So. 2d 766 (Miss. 1989) (father must prove by preponderance that direct payments were for necessities contemplated by support order to obtain credit)
- McKnight v. Jenkins, 155 So. 3d 730 (Miss. 2013) (contempt requires willful and deliberate violation of court order)
- Johnston v. Parham, 758 So. 2d 443 (Miss. Ct. App. 2000) (Mizell is fact-specific and does not broadly bar credit for grandparent contributions)
