The plaintiff wife commenced an action for divorce in September, 1968. On September 24,1969, a judgment of divorce was rendered which also provided that the defendant husband pay the plaintiff $75 per month for the support of each of their two minor children. On February 13, 1974, the plaintiff filed a motion for modification. On February 26, 1974, the court granted the motion for modification and increased the support to $150 per month for each child. The defendant has appealed.
The court did not hear any evidence but had before it the sworn financial affidavits of the parties as of the time of the divorce on September 24,1969, and those filed on February 26, 1974, the day of the hearing. In its finding the court compared the income and assets of each party at the time of divorce and at the time of the hearing for modification. Further, the court took judicial notice in its finding that each child was four and one-half years older than she had been at the time of the divorce “with commensurate greater costs for clothing and maintenance” and took further judicial notice “of the marked economic inflation and devalued buying power of the dollar from September, 1969 to February, 1974.” The entire transcript of the proceedings, printed in the defendant’s brief, reveals that the court did not mention to counsel that it planned to take judicial notice of these two matters.
Notice to the parties is not always required when a court takes judicial notice. Our own cases have
Even when a fact, such as whether a certain date fell on a Tuesday, is not open to argument, it may be the better practice to give the parties an opportunity to be heard.
Karp
v.
Urban Redevelopment Commission,
Other authorities have drawn a distinction between “legislative facts,” those which help determine the content of law and policy, and “adjudicative facts,” facts concerning the parties and events of a particular case. The former may be judicially noticed without affording the parties an opportunity to be heard, but the latter, at least if central to the case, may not. Davis, “Judicial Notice,” 55 Colum. L. Rev. 945, 952-59, 984. The distinction has been adopted in rule 201 of the new Federal Rules of Evidence, which requires an opportunity to be heard when any adjudicative fact is judicially noticed.
"Whether a child’s clothing expenses increase “commensurately” with her age is open to argument. Young children may outgrow clothes more rapidly, but older children may require more varied wardrobes. This “fact” is one of which judicial notice
Whether there has been inflation between 1969 and 1974 is not open to argument. The extent of that inflation and its effect on the necessary expenses of the parties, however, is open to dispute. See
Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
v.
Public Utilities Commission,
There is error, the modification of the support order is set aside and a new hearing on the motion for modification is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
There are two types of facts considered suitable for the taking of judicial notice: those which are “common knowledge” and those which are “capable of accurate and ready demonstration.” McCormick, Evidence (2d Ed.) § 330, p. 763. Courts must have some discretion in determining what facts fit into these categories. It may be appropriate to save time by judicially noticing borderline facts, so long as the parties are given an opportunity to be heard.
Compare
State
v.
Tomanelli,
