delivered the opinion of the court:
Petitioner, Judith Ann Collins, appeals from an order entered by the circuit court of Jefferson County on July 3, 1984, allowing respondent’s, Richard Wayne Chenoweth’s, petition to abate child support, refusing to hold respondent in contempt of court, and refusing to award petitioner attorney fees and costs. For the reasons which follow, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and reverse and remand with directions in part.
The parties’ marriage was dissolved by the circuit court of Jefferson County on February 10, 1982. Respondent was ordered to pay the sum of $265 per month child support for two minor children. He was further ordered to keep certain health insurance in force for the benefit
“E. That Defendant's Petition to Temporarily Suspend or Abate Child Support Payments shall be and is hereby granted after said United States Savings Bonds and said sum of $2,500.00 have been exhausted, [sic] and while Defendant is not gainfully employed.”
Petitioner contends on appeal that the trial court erred in (1) anticipatorily granting respondent’s petition to suspend child support payments on the contingencies of exhaustion of monies and nonemployment, and in failing to find a substantial change in circumstances; (2) failing to hold respondent in contempt and in failing to find nonpayment of child support not to be in good faith; and (3) failing to award petitioner attorney fees and costs.
There is no question that substantial economic reverses resulting from unemployment are proper circumstances to consider by the trial court in determining whether support obligations should be reduced or terminated, but such changes in economic circumstances must be fortuitous in nature, and not the result of deliberate action by the party seeking the reduction or termination. (In re Marriage of Stephenson (1983),
In addition, the order of the trial court necessarily depends on the respondent receiving pension funds. The fact that respondent is expected, to receive pension funds does not mean he will receive such funds. Such expectancies should not and cannot be considered by the trial court. (Schwartz v. Schwartz (1976),
Regarding the trial court’s failure to hold defendant in contempt of court, a prima facie showing of contempt was made by the undisputed evidence that respondent had failed to make the child support payments as provided in the judgment of dissolution. He admitted in his own testimony that he last paid child support in March of 1984. The burden then shifted to respondent to show that the failure to pay was not wilful, but due entirely to his inability to pay. “It is not a contempt of court to fail to pay money which one neither has nor can obtain and which he has not causelessly either put out of his hands or failed to receive.” (White v. Adolph (1940),
Petitioner’s final contention on appeal is that the trial court erred in failing to award petitioner attorney fees and costs in connection with prosecution of her petition for contempt and in relation to the filing by respondent of his petition to temporarily suspend or abate child support payments. As we have previously indicated, a contempt order should have been entered by the trial court, and attorney fees and costs of petitioner in connection with the contempt proceedings should have been ordered paid by respondent under section 508(b) of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1983, ch. 40, par. 508(b)). Section 508(b) is a mandatory provision requiring the trial court to order the parent against whom the child support enforcement action was brought to pay the costs and reasonable attorney fees incurred by the custodial parent in bringing the action when the delinquent parent failed to pay support without cause or justification. Fogliano v. Fogliano (1983),
The petition for attorney fees filed by petitioner in connection with her defense of respondent’s petition to suspend child support payments does not come within the provisions of section 508(b), and is governed by the general rule that the allowance of attorney fees is
Accordingly, that part of the order of the circuit court of Jefferson County suspending child support payments is reversed. That part of the order refusing to hold respondent in contempt is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to the trial court to hold respondent in contempt, impose appropriate sanctions, and to award petitioner attorney fees and costs in connection with the contempt proceedings. The remainder of the order is affirmed.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and reversed and remanded with directions in part.
WELCH and KASSERMAN, JJ., concur.
