CHESTER CHIN vs. EDITH E. MERRIOT.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
January 30, 2015
470 Mass. 527 (2015)
Franklin. October 6, 2014. - January 30, 2015. Present: GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, LENK, & HINES, JJ.
A Probate and Family Court judge properly dismissed a complaint seeking modification of a judgment of divorce to terminate an obligation to pay alimony that was contained in a provision of a separation agreement that merged with the judgment, where the Alimony Reform Act of 2011, St. 2011, c. 124 (act), which became effective after the date of entry of the judgment, afforded no basis upon which to terminate the obligation to pay alimony, in that the uncodified sections of the act make clear that the act‘s provisions for termination of general term alimony upon a payor‘s reaching full retirement age or upon a recipient‘s cohabitation and maintenance of a common household with another person for more than three months apply prospectively [531-537], and where no other changed circumstances were present that would require an adjustment to the amount of alimony [537-538].
COMPLAINT for divorce filed in the Franklin Division of the Probate and Family Court Department on January 11, 2011.
A complaint for modification, filed on March 11, 2013, was heard by Beth A. Crawford, J.
The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for direct appellate review.
William Sanford Durland, III, for Chester Chin.
Leslie H. Powers for Edith E. Merriot.
The following submitted briefs for amici curiae:
Rachel B. Biscardi for Women‘s Bar Association of Massachusetts.
Richard M. Novitch, Maureen McBrien, & Charles P. Kindregan, pro se.
David H. Lee & Holly A. Hinte, pro se.
DUFFLY, J. After twelve years of marriage, Chester Chin and Edith E. Merriot were divorced by a judgment of divorce nisi in August, 2011. At the time of the divorce, Chin was sixty-seven1
In March, 2013, Chin filed an amended complaint for modification in the Probate and Family Court in which he sought to terminate his alimony obligation. To support his claim for relief, Chin asserted as “changed circumstances” that he had attained the age of sixty-eight, “full retirement age” as defined by
The retirement and cohabitation provisions on which Chin relies were enacted as part of the Alimony Reform Act of 2011, St. 2011, c. 124 (alimony reform act or act). The act was made effective as of March 1, 2012, more than seven months after entry of the parties’ judgment of divorce nisi. Following a trial on the complaint for modification, a Probate and Family Court judge concluded that neither provision applied retroactively to divorce judgments ordering general term alimony that were in existence prior to the effective date of the alimony reform act. Applying the change of circumstances standard in effect before March 1, 2012, the judge determined that Chin had not shown a material change of circumstances warranting modification of the alimony order,2 and dismissed the complaint. Chin appealed from the judgment of dismissal,3 and we allowed his petition for direct appellate review.
The question we confront in this case is whether modification of an obligation to pay periodic or general term alimony that is
1. Background. We summarize the judge‘s findings of fact, adding certain uncontested facts from the record. Chin and Merriot were married in Massachusetts on November 28, 1998. Both had been married previously; Chin has two children from his prior marriage, and Merriot has four children from hers. The parties’ marriage produced no children. During their marriage, Chin had been a teacher and Merriot a paraprofessional and substitute teacher. By the time of the divorce, each had retired.
The parties last lived together in January, 2011. On August 17, 2011, they entered into a separation agreement allocating their real and personal property. Article VI of that agreement provided that Chin “shall pay to the Wife alimony in the monthly amount of six hundred and fifty ($650) dollars . . . . The Husband‘s alimony obligation shall terminate upon the death of either party or the Wife‘s remarriage.” Under the terms of the separation agreement, “Article VI . . . shall be merged and incorporated into the divorce judgment and shall not retain independent legal significance.”6
One year after the effective date of the alimony reform act, Chin filed a complaint for modification asserting that he had reached “full retirement age” according to the act, and seeking termination of his obligation to pay alimony. Merriot denied that there had been a material change in circumstances because, at the time the divorce judgment entered, her former husband already had passed “full retirement age.” Chin thereafter amended his complaint to include as an additional ground for modification that Merriot had been cohabiting with another person since November 19, 2012.
Following a trial on the complaint for modification, the judge found that Chin had remarried in 2012, and, at the time of trial, Chin, his new wife, and her sixteen year old son were residing together. Chin was the primary source of support for his new wife and stepson, and his wife contributed some income from child support and part-time employment. Merriot “moved in with her significant other” in September, 2012, and, by the time of trial, he and Merriot were “in a committed relationship and . . . [were] economically interdependent“; they had “continuously maintained a common household for more than three months.”
The judge concluded that modification of the alimony order was not governed by either the retirement provision or the cohabitation provision, because uncodified § 4 of the alimony reform act provides that
2. Discussion. Under the alimony reform act, the periodic payment of support to an economically dependent spouse falls within the definition of “general term alimony.”
“General term alimony shall be suspended, reduced, or terminated upon the cohabitation of the recipient spouse when the payor shows that the recipient spouse has maintained a common household, as defined in this subsection, with another person for a continuous period of at least [three] months.”
a. Standard of review. We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo. Sheehan v. Weaver, 467 Mass. 734, 737
The same standards of construction are applicable to both codified and uncodified provisions of the General Laws. We therefore construe the language of the uncodified sections of the alimony reform act together with the codified sections, according to their plain meaning, unless reliance on the literal words would produce an absurd result, or a result contrary to the Legislature‘s manifest intent. See Murphy v. Department of Correction, 429 Mass. 736, 737-738 (1999), and cases cited.
Sections 4 through 6 of the uncodified provisions of the alimony reform act provide essential context. As a general matter, uncodified provisions of an act express the Legislature‘s view on some aspect of its operation; they are not the source of the substantive provisions of the law. Uncodified provisions may, for example, address when the legislation will take effect, state if it will have retroactive effect, and provide mechanisms for handling special situations during the transition period between the date of enactment and the effective date of the new statute. See, e.g., Murphy v. Department of Correction, supra at 737 (uncodified provision stating act‘s effective date and that act will apply retroactively); Commissioner of Banks v. Chase Sec. Corp., 298 Mass. 285, 309 (1937) (uncodified provision precluding application of act to agreements existing prior to act‘s effective date, which were valid under earlier statute); Commonwealth v. Abrahams, 85 Mass. App. Ct. 150, 153-154 (2014) (uncodified provision “imposes early deadline for submission of” biological samples). Uncodified provisions also may include severability clauses, savings clauses, and statements concerning the fiscal consequences of legislation. See, e.g., Franchise Tax Bd. v. Superior Court, 221 Cal. App. 4th 647, 661-662 (2013).
Here, uncodified § 7 of St. 2011, c. 124, sets March 1, 2012, as the effective date of the alimony reform act; uncodified §§ 4 through 6 describe whether, to what extent, and when the act will be applied to alimony judgments in existence prior to that date.9
i. Termination “under such judgments.” The first clause of uncodified § 4 (a) provides that alimony judgments entered before March 1, 2012, may terminate “only under such judgments.” We interpret this to mean that alimony judgments entered into before the effective date of the alimony reform act may be terminated only in accordance with provisions governing termination that are contained within the existing judgment, either by a judge following a trial or by the parties through a negotiated agreement incorporated in the judgment. Orders for payment of alimony in judgments issued based on evidence in a contested divorce generally will be subject to modification on a showing of a material change in circumstances.10 See Schuler v. Schuler, 382 Mass. 366, 368 (1981);
Thus, an order for alimony in a divorce judgment that entered prior to March 1, 2012, includes, as part of its terms, the standards for modification existing at the time the judgment entered, unless the parties explicitly agreed otherwise, or the alimony reform act itself unequivocally provides a specific exception that a provision governing modification is to have retroactive effect. See Hay v. Cloutier, 389 Mass. 248, 253 (1983), quoting Hanscom v. Malden & Melrose Gas Light Co., 220 Mass. 1, 3 (1914).13
ii. Termination “under a subsequent modification.” The second clause of uncodified § 4 (a) provides that alimony judgments that entered prior to March 1, 2012, may be terminated “only . . . under a subsequent modification.” We interpret “words in a statute . . . in light of the other words surrounding them.” Commonwealth v. Magnus M., 461 Mass. 459, 462 (2012), quoting Commonwealth v. Brooks, 366 Mass. 423, 428 (1974). The placement of the phrase “under such judgments,” immediately
The mere filing of a complaint after March 1, 2012, seeking modification of an alimony judgment that entered prior to that date, based on the retirement or cohabitation provisions, cannot be what the Legislature intended by “subsequent modification.” Such a reading not only would disregard the context in which the phrase appears in uncodified § 4 (a), but also would not take into account the remaining provisions of uncodified §§ 4, 5, and 6. By emphasizing the limitations on prospective application of the alimony reform act in three separate provisions in the uncodified sections of the act, the Legislature could not have expressed its intent more clearly: only a claim for modification based on durational limits may, but will not always, apply retroactively to existing alimony judgments.
This point is made evident by considering uncodified § 4 (a) in combination with uncodified § 4 (b). That section states that
We do not agree that uncodified § 4 (a) was intended to incorporate, as an exception to the alimony reform act‘s general rule of prospective application, all of the provisions in
Moreover, the reading Chin proposes is inconsistent with the over-all scheme of the alimony reform act. Where possible, we seek to harmonize the provisions of a statute with related provisions that are part of the same statutory scheme “so as to give full effect to the expressed intent of the Legislature.” Commonwealth v. Hampe, 419 Mass. 514, 518 (1995). As stated,
c. Material change in circumstances. In this case, the judge found that no other circumstances warranted a finding that there were changed circumstances that would require an adjustment to the amount of alimony Chin had been ordered to pay. See Bush v. Bush, 402 Mass. 406, 412 n.9 (1988), quoting Gottsegen v. Gottsegen, 397 Mass. 617, 625 (1986) (rejecting claim that alimony should be modified “solely on the basis of a finding of cohabitation“). See also Pierce v. Pierce, 455 Mass. 286, 302
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
“(b) [G. L. c. 208, §§ 48-55], inclusive, . . . shall not be deemed a material change of circumstance that warrants modification of the amount of existing alimony judgments; provided, however, that existing alimony judgments that exceed the durational limits under [G. L. c. 208, § 49,] shall be deemed a material change of circumstance that warrant modification.
“Existing alimony awards shall be deemed general term alimony. Existing alimony awards which exceed the durational limits established in [G. L. c. 208, § 49,] shall be modified upon a complaint for modification without additional material change of circumstance, unless the court finds that deviation from the durational limits is warranted.
“(c) Under no circumstances shall [G. L. c. 208, §§ 48-55], inclusive, provide a right to seek or receive modification of an existing alimony judgment in which the parties have agreed that their alimony judgment is not modifiable, or in which the parties have expressed their intention that their agreed alimony provisions survive the judgment and therefore are not modifiable.
“SECTION 5. Any complaint for modification filed by a payor under [§] 4 of this act solely because the existing alimony judgment exceeds the durational limits of [G. L. c. 208, § 49,] may only be filed under the following time limits:
“(1) Payors who were married to the alimony recipient [five] years or less, may file a modification action on or after March 1, 2013.
“(2) Payors who were married to the alimony recipient [ten] years or less, but more than [five] years, may file a modification action on or after March 1, 2014.
“(3) Payors who were married to the alimony recipient [fifteen] years or less, but more than [ten] years, may file a modification action on or after March 1, 2015.
“(4) Payors who were married to the alimony recipient [twenty] years or less, but more than [fifteen] years, may file a modification action on or after September 1, 2015.”
“After a judgment for alimony or an annual allowance . . . for the spouse . . . , the court may, from time to time, upon the action for modification of either party, revise and alter its judgment relative to the amount of such alimony or annual allowance and the payment thereof, and may make any judgment relative thereto which it might have made in the original action.”
This paragraph has been in effect, employing substantially the same language, since at least 1860. See Graves v. Graves, 108 Mass. 314, 317-318 (1871) (court may “from time to time, on the petition of either party, revise and alter any decree respecting the amount of such alimony or . . . the payment thereof, . . . and may make any decree respecting the same which it might have made in the original suit“); Gen. Stats. c. 107, § 47 (1860).
