¶ 1. Thе Hancock County Chancery Court found Roger Caplinger in contempt for failure to pay child support and uncov
FACTS
¶ 2. Roger and Gina were divorced in 1994. Pursuant to their child-custody, support, and property-settlement agreement, Gina had custody of the two children, Ashley and Christen. Rоger was to pay child support, provide health insurance for the children, and pay half of any deductibles.
¶ 8. In 2007, Ashley was seventeen and became pregnant. Around the end of December, she lived with her father before moving into an apartment -with her boyfriend in August 2008. The parties agree that Ashley was emancipated beginning in 2008. In June 2008, Christen was fifteen and moved in with her father for a few months prompting Roger to file for modification of custody. Gina counterclaimed for contempt and to modify child support. Ultimately, Christen moved back to her mother’s in September, and Roger withdrew his motion.
¶ 4. Gina proceedеd on the counterclaim, and after a trial, the chancellor found Roger in contempt of the property-settlement agreement. Explaining that the agreement was ambiguous, the chancellor interpreted it and determined Roger was $52,713 in arrears. The chancellor ordered him to pay the arrearage and attorney’s fees of $9,784.28.
¶ 5. Roger now appeals arguing that the chancellor erred in construing the property settlement agreement, refusing to acknowledge the divisible support order, finding Roger in contempt, and awarding attorney’s fees. Roger asserts that the chancеllor’s findings were against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 6. “Chancellors are afforded wide latitude in fashioning equitable remedies in domestic relations matters, and their decisions will not be reversed if the findings of fact are supported by substantial credible evidence in the record.” Henderson v. Henderson,
DISCUSSION
1. Property-Settlement Agreement
¶ 7. Roger agrees that the property-settlement agreement is ambiguous but challenges the interpretation of two specific clauses. Each will be addressed in turn.
a. Periodic Increase
¶ 8. Roger claims the chancellor failed to follow the rules of construction and improperly interpreted the following escalation clause:
Periodic Increase: Husband shall increase his payment to Wife, for child support, with each raise, such increase*996 to be twenty (20%) percent of his increase in pay.
¶ 9. The interpretation of an ambiguous writing is a question of fact for determination by the fact-finder. Dennis v. Searle,
¶ 10. The chancellor found that the periodic increase was enforceable because its language was clear, and Roger had voluntarily increased his payment from $400 to $500 in 1996. The chancellor also found that the periodic increase was related to the statutory guidelines and was intended tо keep payments at twenty percent of Roger’s adjusted gross income (AGI) for the two children. To calculate the arrear-age, the chancellor determined Roger’s adjusted gross income for each year
¶ 11. After reviewing the evidencе presented, we find that the chancellor’s interpretation was supported by the plain language of the agreement and the parties’ conduct. Roger and Gina both testified to their understanding of the periodic-increase clause. Each understood that when Roger received a raise, he should increase his support payments equal to twenty percent of that raise. And Roger voluntarily increased his payment by $100 in 1996. Further, the chancellor’s determination that the clause referenced the child-support guidelines is both logical and practical. For the last thirteen years, neither party ensured that the periodic increases happened. Instead of attempting to reach back in time and determine exactly what raises Roger received on what dates, the chancellor determined Roger’s adjusted gross income and applied the statutory twenty percent. Generously, the chancellor determined that because the clause did not provide for decreases in salary, the arrearage should only be calculated from 2004.
¶ 12. This Court hаs held that property-settlement agreements are not treated the same as support ordered by a chancellor. In Wing v. Wing,
(a) specify -with certainty the particular cost of living or consumer price index which is to be utilized (there are many);
(b) show the applicable ratio (present CPI is to ascertainable CPI as present award is to future award); (c) calculate thе base figure as of the date of judgment; (d) establish frequency of adjustments (we suggest nothing less than yearly); and (e) establish an effective date for each adjustment (e.g. anniversary of date of judgment).
Wing,
¶ 13. But more recently, in Speed v. Speed,
¶ 14. This Court has also considered escalation clauses in the context of child-support agreements in irreconcilable differences divorce settlements. In Rogers v. Rogers,
¶ 15. Roger agreed to a periodic increase in child-support payments based on a percentage of periodic increases in his net income. There was no evidence of fraud, mistаke, or overreaching in the execution of the parties’ property-settlement agreement. Roger simply agreed to do more than the law required for his children, and the chancellor required him to live up to his promises. This agreement is enforceable.
b. Per-Child Support Order
¶ 16. Roger argues that the chancellor erroneously determined that because he increased his support payments to $500, he converted the divisible support award into a global support award and could not arbitrarily divide the new amount when one child was emancipated.
¶ 17. For global child-support payments, the emanсipation of one child does not automatically reduce the lump-sum payment. Varner v. Varner,
¶ 18. Here, the support order states: “Husband shall pay to Wife, as child support, the sum of Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) per month, per сhild, for a total of Four Hundred Dollars ($400.00).... ” This is a divisible support order. As we find that the property-settlement agreement is clear and unambiguous as to this issue, the chancellor erred in determining that Roger’s conduct created a global support award. The support order was and remains divisible.
2. Uncovered Medical Bills
¶ 19. Roger clаims that the chancellor’s finding of contempt regarding his failure to pay half of the children’s medical bills is not supported by the record.
¶ 20. The property-settlement agreement reads: “Husband shall be solely responsible for the payment of any and all insurance policies covering ... [the] minor children ..., and any deductibles not covered by insurance will be split by the parties.” The chancellor found that Roger had not paid his portion of the medical bills prior to trial and held him in contempt.
¶ 21. There is no language in the property-settlement agreement about uncovered medical bills. The agreement specifically provides for insurance coverage and deductibles. Though it may be Roger’s moral obligation to pay half of the children’s uncovered medical bills, he was not required to do so by the plain language of the property-settlement agreement. We find that the chancellоr was manifestly wrong in construing the agreement to require Roger’s payment of half of the children’s uncovered medical bills.
3. Contempt
¶ 22. Roger asserts that the chancellor erroneously held him in contempt for his failure to pay child support. He argues that he could not have known how much support to pay prior to the chancellor’s construction of the agreement.
¶ 23. A payor’s failure to comply with a court order is prima facie evidence of contempt. Rainwater v. Rainwater,
¶ 24. Here, Roger testified that he understood he was supposed to increase his support payments by twenty percent of each raise he rеceived. It is undisputed that he deliberately failed to do so. He cannot now, after thirteen years, argue that he was insufficiently advised of what he was ordered to do. That he could not anticipate the exact amount of his arrear-age is not relevant to his willful disregard of the support order. Bеcause Roger has made no attempt since 1996 to increase his
¶ 25. Further, we note that it is errоr, as a matter of law, for a chancellor not to award interest on a judgment for past-due support. Ladner v. Logan,
4. Attorney’s Fees
¶ 26. Roger argues that there was no basis for the chancellor’s award of attorney’s fees. We disagree. An award of attorney’s fees is appropriate when there has been a finding of contempt. Gardner v. Gardner,
CONCLUSION
¶ 27. The chancellor did not abuse his discretion in interpreting the periodic-increase clause, finding Roger in contempt for his failure to pay child support, or ordering Roger to pay attorney’s fees. It was error to find that the divisible child-support award had been, converted into a global award, and to find Roger in contempt for his failure to pay the children’s uncovered medical bills. On remand, we direct the сhancellor to recalculate Roger’s arrearage and current support obligations based on a divisible support order and to assess interest on the arrearage at a fair rate under the circumstances.
¶ 28. THE JUDGMENT OF THE HANCOCK COUNTY CHANCERY COURT IS AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED EQUALLY BETWEEN THE APPELLANT AND THE APPELLEE.
Notes
. Roger's AGI was determined from his Social Security Administration earnings report using аn effective overall tax rate of twenty-five percent.
. We note that under a strict construction of the contract’s language, Roger would not be entitled to any reduction of support during the years his salary fell below $50,000. Had the chancellor not been so generous, Roger would be obliged to pay a substantially higher arrearage.
